<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/style.xsl" type="text/xsl"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0"><channel><atom:link href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/my-birding-life/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title><![CDATA[My Birding Life]]></title><podcast:guid>3f77a48c-13d3-5fe1-b517-a1560abbff87</podcast:guid><lastBuildDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 07:00:43 +0000</lastBuildDate><generator>Captivate.fm</generator><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><copyright><![CDATA[Copyright 2026 Chris Ducker]]></copyright><managingEditor>Chris Ducker</managingEditor><itunes:summary><![CDATA[My Birding Life is the podcast for anyone who's ever been stopped in their tracks by a bird.  

Every episode, host Chris Ducker sits down with a passionate birder for an honest, warm conversation about the hobby we love. From conservationists dedicating their lives to protecting species and habitats, to lifelong birders with decades of stories to tell, to everyday birders who found birds at just the right moment in their lives — every guest brings something different, but they all share one thing: a genuine love for the natural world. 

We go deep into the stories behind their journeys. The first sightings that sparked a lifelong obsession. The wild places that shaped them. The birds they'll never forget. The hard-earned tips that only come from real time in the field. And the conservation work being done to protect the birds that matter most. 

Whether you've been birding for fifty years or you've just started noticing the birds in your garden, My Birding Life is your show. Warm, personal, and full of the kind of conversations that make you want to grab your binoculars — this is birding through the eyes of the people who live it. 

Real birders, real stories, real advice!]]></itunes:summary><image><url>https://artwork.captivate.fm/d5d4ebef-dc0e-463e-8c0c-906ba438aa05/MBL-Podcast-Art-2-2-1-1-compressed.jpg</url><title>My Birding Life</title><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link></image><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/d5d4ebef-dc0e-463e-8c0c-906ba438aa05/MBL-Podcast-Art-2-2-1-1-compressed.jpg"/><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Chris Ducker</itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author>Chris Ducker</itunes:author><description>My Birding Life is the podcast for anyone who&apos;s ever been stopped in their tracks by a bird.  

Every episode, host Chris Ducker sits down with a passionate birder for an honest, warm conversation about the hobby we love. From conservationists dedicating their lives to protecting species and habitats, to lifelong birders with decades of stories to tell, to everyday birders who found birds at just the right moment in their lives — every guest brings something different, but they all share one thing: a genuine love for the natural world. 

We go deep into the stories behind their journeys. The first sightings that sparked a lifelong obsession. The wild places that shaped them. The birds they&apos;ll never forget. The hard-earned tips that only come from real time in the field. And the conservation work being done to protect the birds that matter most. 

Whether you&apos;ve been birding for fifty years or you&apos;ve just started noticing the birds in your garden, My Birding Life is your show. Warm, personal, and full of the kind of conversations that make you want to grab your binoculars — this is birding through the eyes of the people who live it. 

Real birders, real stories, real advice!</description><link>https://mybirdinglife.com/</link><atom:link href="https://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com" rel="hub"/><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:category text="Leisure"><itunes:category text="Hobbies"/></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Science"><itunes:category text="Nature"/></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Leisure"><itunes:category text="Home &amp; Garden"/></itunes:category><podcast:locked>no</podcast:locked><podcast:medium>podcast</podcast:medium><item><title>Celebrating 20 Years of the Urban Birder with David Lindo</title><itunes:title>Celebrating 20 Years of the Urban Birder with David Lindo</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>He's one of the most recognisable names in birding and he's spent 20 years making the case that you don't need to travel to wild, remote places to find birds worth watching. You just need to look up.</p><p>Born and raised in Wembley, North London, David Lindo taught himself to bird as a child with no mentor and no one around him who shared the interest. That self-taught curiosity became a mission: get people living in urban areas connected to nature through birds, wherever they are in the world.</p><p>Along the way he's been named one of the seven most influential people in wildlife by BBC Wildlife Magazine, written books from <em>The Urban Birder</em> to <em>Tales from Concrete Jungles</em>, and birded in over 400 cities across the globe.</p><p>In this episode, recorded to mark the 20th anniversary of The Urban Birder brand, David joins Chris to talk about how a chance BBC Springwatch screen test in 2006 turned a marketing idea into a life's mission, why he thinks the biggest barrier to birding is the myth that you need expertise first, his own experience with depression and a more recent vestibular migraine diagnosis, and why nature, even just outside your window, has the power to change how you feel.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>How The Urban Birder was born the night before a BBC Springwatch screen test in 2006</li><li>Why David believes the biggest stumbling block for new birders is thinking they need knowledge before they start</li><li>Birding, burnout, and his 2024 vestibular migraine diagnosis</li><li>Birding in 400+ cities and why the ones with nothing written about them online excite him most</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li>03:16 — Urban Birder Origins</li><li>06:30 — Springwatch Breakthrough</li><li>09:33 — Urban Birding Goes Global</li><li>10:33 — Changing Views on City Birding</li><li>15:00 — Getting People Started</li><li>21:57 — Doorstep Birding Surprises</li><li>25:27 — Birding and Mental Health</li><li>27:28 — Health Crash and Recovery</li><li>29:28 — Nature as Therapy</li><li>30:12 — 400 Cities of Birding</li><li>32:49 — Why Urban Birding Works</li><li>35:09 — New Birders New Voices</li><li>42:43 — Books and What’s Next</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://theurbanbirder.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Urban Birder</a></li><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/theurbanbirder/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow David on Instagram</a></li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>He's one of the most recognisable names in birding and he's spent 20 years making the case that you don't need to travel to wild, remote places to find birds worth watching. You just need to look up.</p><p>Born and raised in Wembley, North London, David Lindo taught himself to bird as a child with no mentor and no one around him who shared the interest. That self-taught curiosity became a mission: get people living in urban areas connected to nature through birds, wherever they are in the world.</p><p>Along the way he's been named one of the seven most influential people in wildlife by BBC Wildlife Magazine, written books from <em>The Urban Birder</em> to <em>Tales from Concrete Jungles</em>, and birded in over 400 cities across the globe.</p><p>In this episode, recorded to mark the 20th anniversary of The Urban Birder brand, David joins Chris to talk about how a chance BBC Springwatch screen test in 2006 turned a marketing idea into a life's mission, why he thinks the biggest barrier to birding is the myth that you need expertise first, his own experience with depression and a more recent vestibular migraine diagnosis, and why nature, even just outside your window, has the power to change how you feel.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>How The Urban Birder was born the night before a BBC Springwatch screen test in 2006</li><li>Why David believes the biggest stumbling block for new birders is thinking they need knowledge before they start</li><li>Birding, burnout, and his 2024 vestibular migraine diagnosis</li><li>Birding in 400+ cities and why the ones with nothing written about them online excite him most</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li>03:16 — Urban Birder Origins</li><li>06:30 — Springwatch Breakthrough</li><li>09:33 — Urban Birding Goes Global</li><li>10:33 — Changing Views on City Birding</li><li>15:00 — Getting People Started</li><li>21:57 — Doorstep Birding Surprises</li><li>25:27 — Birding and Mental Health</li><li>27:28 — Health Crash and Recovery</li><li>29:28 — Nature as Therapy</li><li>30:12 — 400 Cities of Birding</li><li>32:49 — Why Urban Birding Works</li><li>35:09 — New Birders New Voices</li><li>42:43 — Books and What’s Next</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://theurbanbirder.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Urban Birder</a></li><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/theurbanbirder/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow David on Instagram</a></li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">14bc2512-a253-41aa-a9ac-294cc15c6d5e</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/5dc8fe64-b346-44ab-b7b0-ba9fa4f263bb/MBL-EPISODE-ARTWORK.png"/><pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2026 08:00:00 +0100</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/14bc2512-a253-41aa-a9ac-294cc15c6d5e.mp3" length="96331562" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>50:10</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>How to Plan a Big Year of Birding with Branwen Munn</title><itunes:title>How to Plan a Big Year of Birding with Branwen Munn</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>What happens when someone who listens for a living turns their ears to the natural world? Branwen Munn is a professional DJ, music producer, and multi-instrumentalist based in West Wales and a birder with an infectious passion for the outdoors. In 2024, she embarked on a Big Year alongside her parents, travelling the length and breadth of the UK in search of as many species as possible. In 2026, the National Trust chose her to front their year of community birding events across West Wales, leading walks, spotlighting a Bird of the Month, and building something genuinely special along the way.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with Branwen to dig into the highs, the logistical headaches, and the beautiful messiness of planning a UK Big Year, plus her refreshingly honest take on what kind of birder she really is.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>How to plan a UK Big Year — Branwen breaks down her approach: start with habitats, cross-reference with the seasons, build a spreadsheet (or several), and don't underestimate the logistics of fitting it around real life</li><li>The numbers game — She ended 2024 on 176 species, aiming for 200. Why the early months gave her almost half her total — and why motivation gets harder as the year goes on</li><li>The Skye Christmas that wasn't — A week on the Isle of Skye in December to chase white-tailed eagles, a full week of rain, and a single beautiful day on the Sleat Peninsula that almost made it worth it</li><li>Apps and tools for tracking your year — Why Branwen landed on BTO BirdTrack to log sightings, and how having the data in one place changed her relationship with the records</li><li>The ethics of the tick — When does a bird count? Branwen talks through her decision to remove a snow goose from the list, the Pallid Harrier that keeps returning to Llanelli Wetlands, and why she's firmly not a twitcher</li><li>Birding as a trans person — Branwen reflects candidly and warmly on her experience in the birding community, and why it's one of the most welcoming spaces she's found</li><li>The National Trust project — How a talk about her Big Year at Dinefwr turned into a full year of community birding events across Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire, and Ceredigion — complete with walks, crafts, a community species log, and a celebration disco in December</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li>02:08 - What Is A Big Year</li><li>04:25 - Results And Birding Style</li><li>07:01 - Vlogging Origins</li><li>08:54 - Mindful Birding Moment</li><li>10:31 - Planning The Big Year</li><li>12:11 - Budget And Family Team</li><li>14:35 - Skye Setback Story</li><li>17:18 - Birding Then and Now</li><li>22:03 - Staying Motivated Midyear</li><li>25:03 - Tracking With BirdTrack</li><li>27:34 - Local Lifer Highlights</li><li>29:39 - Birding Community</li><li>32:30 - Identity and Inclusion</li><li>34:47 - Counting Questionable Ticks</li><li>38:45 - Fair Weather Birder Reflections</li><li>41:24 - National Trust Big Year</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/branwen.online/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow Branwen on Instagram</a></li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What happens when someone who listens for a living turns their ears to the natural world? Branwen Munn is a professional DJ, music producer, and multi-instrumentalist based in West Wales and a birder with an infectious passion for the outdoors. In 2024, she embarked on a Big Year alongside her parents, travelling the length and breadth of the UK in search of as many species as possible. In 2026, the National Trust chose her to front their year of community birding events across West Wales, leading walks, spotlighting a Bird of the Month, and building something genuinely special along the way.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with Branwen to dig into the highs, the logistical headaches, and the beautiful messiness of planning a UK Big Year, plus her refreshingly honest take on what kind of birder she really is.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>How to plan a UK Big Year — Branwen breaks down her approach: start with habitats, cross-reference with the seasons, build a spreadsheet (or several), and don't underestimate the logistics of fitting it around real life</li><li>The numbers game — She ended 2024 on 176 species, aiming for 200. Why the early months gave her almost half her total — and why motivation gets harder as the year goes on</li><li>The Skye Christmas that wasn't — A week on the Isle of Skye in December to chase white-tailed eagles, a full week of rain, and a single beautiful day on the Sleat Peninsula that almost made it worth it</li><li>Apps and tools for tracking your year — Why Branwen landed on BTO BirdTrack to log sightings, and how having the data in one place changed her relationship with the records</li><li>The ethics of the tick — When does a bird count? Branwen talks through her decision to remove a snow goose from the list, the Pallid Harrier that keeps returning to Llanelli Wetlands, and why she's firmly not a twitcher</li><li>Birding as a trans person — Branwen reflects candidly and warmly on her experience in the birding community, and why it's one of the most welcoming spaces she's found</li><li>The National Trust project — How a talk about her Big Year at Dinefwr turned into a full year of community birding events across Pembrokeshire, Carmarthenshire, and Ceredigion — complete with walks, crafts, a community species log, and a celebration disco in December</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li>02:08 - What Is A Big Year</li><li>04:25 - Results And Birding Style</li><li>07:01 - Vlogging Origins</li><li>08:54 - Mindful Birding Moment</li><li>10:31 - Planning The Big Year</li><li>12:11 - Budget And Family Team</li><li>14:35 - Skye Setback Story</li><li>17:18 - Birding Then and Now</li><li>22:03 - Staying Motivated Midyear</li><li>25:03 - Tracking With BirdTrack</li><li>27:34 - Local Lifer Highlights</li><li>29:39 - Birding Community</li><li>32:30 - Identity and Inclusion</li><li>34:47 - Counting Questionable Ticks</li><li>38:45 - Fair Weather Birder Reflections</li><li>41:24 - National Trust Big Year</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/branwen.online/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow Branwen on Instagram</a></li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">4577bb9f-fdd9-463c-8bbb-60158a522a38</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/ab3e75f3-480c-40e6-871a-b88e13667126/MBL-EPISODE-ARTWORK.png"/><pubDate>Thu, 25 Jun 2026 08:00:00 +0100</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/4577bb9f-fdd9-463c-8bbb-60158a522a38.mp3" length="101554381" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>52:54</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>The Early Birder Catches the Worm with Jon Mason</title><itunes:title>The Early Birder Catches the Worm with Jon Mason</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Jon Mason has spent almost four decades as a geography teacher, an Opticron ambassador, and to a growing audience on Instagram, sharing early morning birding moments from Otmoor and beyond.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with John to talk about a fascination with birds that started before he could walk, why he calls himself a birder rather than a birdwatcher, and how a heart attack a decade ago changed the way he spends his time. From spider's webs at sunrise to a nightingale nobody could see, this is a conversation about noticing more, rushing less, and why the simplest birds are often the best ones.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>A lifetime with birds </strong>— Jon traces his love of birds back to a highchair full of sparrows, and explains why for him birding has never been a hobby, it's just always been there.</li><li><strong>Birder, not birdwatcher</strong> — Why Jon relies on his ears as much as his eyes, and how an old LP called <em>Bird Sounds in Close Up</em> trained him to recognise calls as a boy.</li><li><strong>You are the lesson</strong> — Forty years of teaching geography taught John that you can't fake passion in front of students — you have to live it, out loud, on a chalk hillside with a telescope.</li><li><strong>The heart attack that changed everythin</strong>g — How a health scare ten years ago led Jon to step back from work, invest in time outdoors, and discover that nature does more for his blood pressure than medication.</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps: </strong></p><ul><li>03:00 — A lifetime of loving birds, starting with sparrows on a highchair</li><li>07:00 — Where "The Early Birder" name comes from, and a body clock tuned to the dawn chorus</li><li>11:00 — Sharing birding in the moment on Instagram, and the firecrest that stopped a photograph</li><li>13:00 — Forty years of teaching: "you are the lesson," not the one delivering it</li><li>24:00 — Titchwell RSPB and why it has everything</li><li>33:00 — Quality over quantity: spider's webs, nightingales, and not losing the point of the day</li><li>40:00 — The heart attack, the wake-up call, and why nature is better than medication</li></ul><br/><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://www.theearlybirder.co.uk/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Early Birder</a></li><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/theearlybirder" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow Jon on Instagram</a></li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Jon Mason has spent almost four decades as a geography teacher, an Opticron ambassador, and to a growing audience on Instagram, sharing early morning birding moments from Otmoor and beyond.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with John to talk about a fascination with birds that started before he could walk, why he calls himself a birder rather than a birdwatcher, and how a heart attack a decade ago changed the way he spends his time. From spider's webs at sunrise to a nightingale nobody could see, this is a conversation about noticing more, rushing less, and why the simplest birds are often the best ones.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>A lifetime with birds </strong>— Jon traces his love of birds back to a highchair full of sparrows, and explains why for him birding has never been a hobby, it's just always been there.</li><li><strong>Birder, not birdwatcher</strong> — Why Jon relies on his ears as much as his eyes, and how an old LP called <em>Bird Sounds in Close Up</em> trained him to recognise calls as a boy.</li><li><strong>You are the lesson</strong> — Forty years of teaching geography taught John that you can't fake passion in front of students — you have to live it, out loud, on a chalk hillside with a telescope.</li><li><strong>The heart attack that changed everythin</strong>g — How a health scare ten years ago led Jon to step back from work, invest in time outdoors, and discover that nature does more for his blood pressure than medication.</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps: </strong></p><ul><li>03:00 — A lifetime of loving birds, starting with sparrows on a highchair</li><li>07:00 — Where "The Early Birder" name comes from, and a body clock tuned to the dawn chorus</li><li>11:00 — Sharing birding in the moment on Instagram, and the firecrest that stopped a photograph</li><li>13:00 — Forty years of teaching: "you are the lesson," not the one delivering it</li><li>24:00 — Titchwell RSPB and why it has everything</li><li>33:00 — Quality over quantity: spider's webs, nightingales, and not losing the point of the day</li><li>40:00 — The heart attack, the wake-up call, and why nature is better than medication</li></ul><br/><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://www.theearlybirder.co.uk/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Early Birder</a></li><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/theearlybirder" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow Jon on Instagram</a></li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">126e10df-a8ce-4ac8-a288-b8d53cfa2dd8</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/b62ea5a5-712a-405c-aed2-66f9fcc8a1e0/jon-mason-episode-art.png"/><pubDate>Thu, 18 Jun 2026 08:00:00 +0100</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/126e10df-a8ce-4ac8-a288-b8d53cfa2dd8.mp3" length="94897126" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>49:26</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>How to Boost Your Birding Joy with Suzy Buttress</title><itunes:title>How to Boost Your Birding Joy with Suzy Buttress</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Suzy Buttress has been hosting the Casual Birder podcast for nearly nine years, built entirely around the idea that birding should be enjoyable, accessible, and welcoming to everyone.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with a fellow podcaster to hear how a childhood dream of being Snow White with birds on her hand turned into a 1,085-species world list, a husband she's converted into a bigger birder than herself, and a gentle but very real competition over who gets to 191 first.</p><p>From a wooden spoon worm-feeding contraption to paradise riflebirds in Australia to a missed crane on Big Day that still stings, this is a conversation about finding your people, birding at your own pace, and why the casual approach might be the best one of all.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Nine years of Casual Birder</strong> — How Suzy built a solo podcast from scratch, doing everything herself, and why the community it created changed her life more than she ever expected.</li><li><strong>The monster she created</strong> — Suzy started dragging her photographer husband along on birding trips. Now he's on 191 for the year and she's on 182. She calls it a monster of her own making.</li><li><strong>Getting serious about listing</strong> — How a women's birding challenge introduced Suzy to eBird, and why she won't count a bird unless she could identify it herself.</li><li><strong>The wooden spoon invention</strong> — Suzy's homemade worm-feeding contraption that got a robin coming in for slow-mo photography. Patented, apparently.</li><li><strong>Paradise riflebirds in Australia</strong> — The trip where live mealworms in the hand were suddenly worth the wriggle, thanks to a magpie-sized bird of paradise landing on her palm.</li><li><strong>The Big Day breakdown</strong> — How Suzy and her husband John approach the Global Big Day each year, why filming it adds chaos, and the crane she heard but couldn't bring herself to count.</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li>03:00 — Nine years, 148 episodes, and doing everything solo</li><li>05:00 — How the podcast opened up Suzy's world and connected her to people globally</li><li>06:00 — Where the love of birds began</li><li>11:00 — Paradise riflebirds in Australia and the one time wriggly worms were worth it</li><li>13:00 — When birding got serious: binoculars at 15, a photographer husband, and the podcast</li><li>17:00 — Getting into listing, eBird, and an honesty rule that keeps the count clean</li><li>19:00 — 1,085 species worldwide and why it could be more if she wasn't so strict</li><li>21:00 — The black tern she missed while editing podcast episodes</li><li>25:00 — Binoculars, scopes, cameras, and who carries what</li><li>27:00 — Global Big Day: the logistics, the nightjar finish, and 79 vs 84</li><li>33:00 — 30 Days Wild, red kites in a thunderstorm, and mindful birding</li><li>39:00 — Target lifer: the crested eagle in Panama</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://casualbirder.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Casual Birder Podcast</a></li><li><a href="https://www.gobirdingpodcast.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Hannah and Erik Go Birding Podcast</a></li><li><a href="https://ebird.org/globalbigday" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Global Big Day</a></li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Suzy Buttress has been hosting the Casual Birder podcast for nearly nine years, built entirely around the idea that birding should be enjoyable, accessible, and welcoming to everyone.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with a fellow podcaster to hear how a childhood dream of being Snow White with birds on her hand turned into a 1,085-species world list, a husband she's converted into a bigger birder than herself, and a gentle but very real competition over who gets to 191 first.</p><p>From a wooden spoon worm-feeding contraption to paradise riflebirds in Australia to a missed crane on Big Day that still stings, this is a conversation about finding your people, birding at your own pace, and why the casual approach might be the best one of all.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>Nine years of Casual Birder</strong> — How Suzy built a solo podcast from scratch, doing everything herself, and why the community it created changed her life more than she ever expected.</li><li><strong>The monster she created</strong> — Suzy started dragging her photographer husband along on birding trips. Now he's on 191 for the year and she's on 182. She calls it a monster of her own making.</li><li><strong>Getting serious about listing</strong> — How a women's birding challenge introduced Suzy to eBird, and why she won't count a bird unless she could identify it herself.</li><li><strong>The wooden spoon invention</strong> — Suzy's homemade worm-feeding contraption that got a robin coming in for slow-mo photography. Patented, apparently.</li><li><strong>Paradise riflebirds in Australia</strong> — The trip where live mealworms in the hand were suddenly worth the wriggle, thanks to a magpie-sized bird of paradise landing on her palm.</li><li><strong>The Big Day breakdown</strong> — How Suzy and her husband John approach the Global Big Day each year, why filming it adds chaos, and the crane she heard but couldn't bring herself to count.</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li>03:00 — Nine years, 148 episodes, and doing everything solo</li><li>05:00 — How the podcast opened up Suzy's world and connected her to people globally</li><li>06:00 — Where the love of birds began</li><li>11:00 — Paradise riflebirds in Australia and the one time wriggly worms were worth it</li><li>13:00 — When birding got serious: binoculars at 15, a photographer husband, and the podcast</li><li>17:00 — Getting into listing, eBird, and an honesty rule that keeps the count clean</li><li>19:00 — 1,085 species worldwide and why it could be more if she wasn't so strict</li><li>21:00 — The black tern she missed while editing podcast episodes</li><li>25:00 — Binoculars, scopes, cameras, and who carries what</li><li>27:00 — Global Big Day: the logistics, the nightjar finish, and 79 vs 84</li><li>33:00 — 30 Days Wild, red kites in a thunderstorm, and mindful birding</li><li>39:00 — Target lifer: the crested eagle in Panama</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://casualbirder.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Casual Birder Podcast</a></li><li><a href="https://www.gobirdingpodcast.com/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Hannah and Erik Go Birding Podcast</a></li><li><a href="https://ebird.org/globalbigday" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Global Big Day</a></li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">6827862b-f277-4115-b782-c46a1df785e7</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/92a342f8-7786-4502-9667-e571d7f56f7c/MBL-EPISODE-ARTWORK.png"/><pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 09:00:00 +0100</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/6827862b-f277-4115-b782-c46a1df785e7.mp3" length="82653430" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>43:03</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>The Origin of the Global Birdfair with Tim Appleton MBE</title><itunes:title>The Origin of the Global Birdfair with Tim Appleton MBE</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Tim Appleton MBE has spent decades shaping British birding, from building Rutland Water Nature Reserve from green fields to international acclaim, to co-founding the Global Birdfair to leading one of the UK's greatest conservation success stories: bringing ospreys back to England for the first time since 1847.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with Tim to hear the personal side of that remarkable journey — how the Bird Fair was born from a visit to the Game Fair at Belvoir Castle, what it was actually like to show up to a job where the reserve didn't exist yet, and what a life spent in service of nature really feels like from the inside.</p><p>Tim also opens up about the next generation of conservationists, his concerns about youth engagement in the hobby, and the rapid-fire birding questions that reveal a bogey bird missed in Cuba twice, a three-plane adventure in Colombia, and a forever happy place you can probably already guess.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>The Birdfair origin story — A visit to the Game Fair at Belvoir Castle planted the seed. How the world's first bird fair launched in 1989 with £2,000 from Swarovski and 1,200 people and raised £3,000 in year one.</li><li>Why it still works — No committees, no public funding, no outside interference. Tim and Penny run the whole thing between two people, with 130+ volunteers who show up because they want to.</li><li>Day one at Rutland Water — The reserve didn't exist, the farmers hated him, and his only orientation was an OS map.</li><li>Building from scratch — 100,000 trees, deliberately wiggly lagoon edges, islands made from contractor spoil, and a close working relationship with landscape designer Dame Silvia Crowe.</li><li>Bringing ospreys back to England — Two male birds in 1994 sparked the idea. The translocation project that followed made Tim the first person to find an osprey with young in England since 1847.</li><li>The next generation problem — Why Tim believes organisations with millions of members still aren't doing enough to spark young people into conservation.</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>01:00</strong> — Who is Tim Appleton MBE and why he matters to British birding</li><li><strong>03:00</strong> — Chris and Tim bond over last year's Bird Fair and a day on the Rutland reserve</li><li><strong>05:00</strong> — Why conservation isn't reaching young people and what needs to change</li><li><strong>06:00</strong> — Where the Global Birdfair idea actually came from</li><li><strong>14:00</strong> — Day one at Rutland Water: an OS map and a reserve that didn't exist yet</li><li><strong>17:00</strong> — Planting 100,000 trees and designing lagoons with Dame Silvia Crowe</li><li><strong>21:00</strong> — The osprey story</li><li><strong>31:00</strong> — The young birders giving Tim hope for the future</li><li><strong>38:00</strong> — Bogey bird: the bee hummingbird, missed in Cuba twice</li><li><strong>40:00</strong> — The Orinoco goose adventure</li><li><strong>43:00</strong> — 129 species from the garden at Rutland this year</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://globalbirdfair.org/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Global Birdfair</a></li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tim Appleton MBE has spent decades shaping British birding, from building Rutland Water Nature Reserve from green fields to international acclaim, to co-founding the Global Birdfair to leading one of the UK's greatest conservation success stories: bringing ospreys back to England for the first time since 1847.</p><p>In this episode, Chris sits down with Tim to hear the personal side of that remarkable journey — how the Bird Fair was born from a visit to the Game Fair at Belvoir Castle, what it was actually like to show up to a job where the reserve didn't exist yet, and what a life spent in service of nature really feels like from the inside.</p><p>Tim also opens up about the next generation of conservationists, his concerns about youth engagement in the hobby, and the rapid-fire birding questions that reveal a bogey bird missed in Cuba twice, a three-plane adventure in Colombia, and a forever happy place you can probably already guess.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>The Birdfair origin story — A visit to the Game Fair at Belvoir Castle planted the seed. How the world's first bird fair launched in 1989 with £2,000 from Swarovski and 1,200 people and raised £3,000 in year one.</li><li>Why it still works — No committees, no public funding, no outside interference. Tim and Penny run the whole thing between two people, with 130+ volunteers who show up because they want to.</li><li>Day one at Rutland Water — The reserve didn't exist, the farmers hated him, and his only orientation was an OS map.</li><li>Building from scratch — 100,000 trees, deliberately wiggly lagoon edges, islands made from contractor spoil, and a close working relationship with landscape designer Dame Silvia Crowe.</li><li>Bringing ospreys back to England — Two male birds in 1994 sparked the idea. The translocation project that followed made Tim the first person to find an osprey with young in England since 1847.</li><li>The next generation problem — Why Tim believes organisations with millions of members still aren't doing enough to spark young people into conservation.</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>01:00</strong> — Who is Tim Appleton MBE and why he matters to British birding</li><li><strong>03:00</strong> — Chris and Tim bond over last year's Bird Fair and a day on the Rutland reserve</li><li><strong>05:00</strong> — Why conservation isn't reaching young people and what needs to change</li><li><strong>06:00</strong> — Where the Global Birdfair idea actually came from</li><li><strong>14:00</strong> — Day one at Rutland Water: an OS map and a reserve that didn't exist yet</li><li><strong>17:00</strong> — Planting 100,000 trees and designing lagoons with Dame Silvia Crowe</li><li><strong>21:00</strong> — The osprey story</li><li><strong>31:00</strong> — The young birders giving Tim hope for the future</li><li><strong>38:00</strong> — Bogey bird: the bee hummingbird, missed in Cuba twice</li><li><strong>40:00</strong> — The Orinoco goose adventure</li><li><strong>43:00</strong> — 129 species from the garden at Rutland this year</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="http://instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="http://youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li><li><a href="https://globalbirdfair.org/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Global Birdfair</a></li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">8e4f2456-93fd-4ccc-ba5f-eaa4efbfc5ab</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c46b142c-f1a1-40fc-809a-6c854f6d1c18/MBL-EPISODE-ARTWORK.png"/><pubDate>Thu, 11 Jun 2026 08:00:00 +0100</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/8e4f2456-93fd-4ccc-ba5f-eaa4efbfc5ab.mp3" length="91528375" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>47:40</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item><item><title>Welcome to My Birding Life</title><itunes:title>Welcome to My Birding Life</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Most people don't go looking for birding. It finds them.</p><p>In this first episode, host Chris shares how a period of serious burnout brought him outside and how watching birds quietly changed everything.</p><p>That's the story behind My Birding Life, a brand new podcast where real birders share the moments, places, and birds that shaped them.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>Why Chris started birding and why it genuinely changed his life</li><li>What My Birding Life is all about and who it's for</li><li>The kinds of guests you'll hear from - conservationists, lifelong birders, content creators, and everyday people who found birds when they needed them most</li><li>What to expect in every episode: spark birds, favourite spots, the ones that got away, practical tips, and conservation</li><li>Chris's favourite UK woodland bird</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>01:00</strong> — How burnout led him to spend more time outside and discover birding</li><li><strong>02:00 </strong>— Realising others had their own version of his story and why that inspired the podcast</li><li><strong>03:00</strong> — What every episode will look like: spark birds, favourite places, and honest conversation</li><li><strong>05:00</strong> — Practical tips, identification, and conservation</li><li><strong>06:00</strong> — The guest lineup: conservationists, lifelong birders, content creators, and everyday birders</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="https://www.youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Most people don't go looking for birding. It finds them.</p><p>In this first episode, host Chris shares how a period of serious burnout brought him outside and how watching birds quietly changed everything.</p><p>That's the story behind My Birding Life, a brand new podcast where real birders share the moments, places, and birds that shaped them.</p><p><strong>Episode Takeaways:</strong></p><ul><li>Why Chris started birding and why it genuinely changed his life</li><li>What My Birding Life is all about and who it's for</li><li>The kinds of guests you'll hear from - conservationists, lifelong birders, content creators, and everyday people who found birds when they needed them most</li><li>What to expect in every episode: spark birds, favourite spots, the ones that got away, practical tips, and conservation</li><li>Chris's favourite UK woodland bird</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Episode Timestamps:</strong></p><ul><li><strong>01:00</strong> — How burnout led him to spend more time outside and discover birding</li><li><strong>02:00 </strong>— Realising others had their own version of his story and why that inspired the podcast</li><li><strong>03:00</strong> — What every episode will look like: spark birds, favourite places, and honest conversation</li><li><strong>05:00</strong> — Practical tips, identification, and conservation</li><li><strong>06:00</strong> — The guest lineup: conservationists, lifelong birders, content creators, and everyday birders</li></ul><br/><p></p><p><strong>Important Links &amp; Resources:</strong></p><ul><li><a href="https://www.instagram.com/mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Follow My Birding Life on Instagram</a></li><li><a href="https://www.youtube.com/@mybirdinglife" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Subscribe to My Birding Life on YouTube</a></li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://mybirdinglife.com/]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">ffb12eb9-1a4c-4e68-bf74-3d12a241f44f</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/1e3f22f0-9087-42ad-9e04-5f4afdd83267/WhatsApp-Image-2026-06-10-at-17-01-52.jpeg"/><pubDate>Tue, 09 Jun 2026 15:20:00 +0100</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/ffb12eb9-1a4c-4e68-bf74-3d12a241f44f.mp3" length="17268319" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>09:00</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType></item></channel></rss>