Each December, thousands swap wrapping paper for binoculars and step outside for a different kind of holiday tradition: the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. Instead of hunting for bargains, they hunt for birds—with pencils, rather than pellets. Started in 1900 by ornithologist Frank M. Chapman, the count offered a peaceful alternative to the Christmas "side hunts," where people competed to shoot the most animals. Chapman had a better idea: count them instead. Over a century later, that simple shift has grown into the world"s longest-running citizen-science project.
Audubon Christmas Bird Count
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
An improbable tribute for Towel Day
-
Via Krupp, Capri, Italy
-
Life carries on, rising from a ship s skeleton
-
Central Highlands of Vietnam
-
Happy Holi!
-
A Festivus for the rest of us
-
Sea Otter Awareness Week
-
Santa Claus Village in Rovaniemi, Lapland, Finland
-
Blink and you ll miss it
-
Striated heron on a Victoria water lily, Pantanal, Brazil
-
The Big Blue of the Sierra
-
Celebrating Yi Peng
-
World Lizard Day
-
Storks ready for takeoff
-
Oktoberfest begins!
-
Welcome to my neck of the woods
-
Rock of ages
-
A palace for the public
-
Temple of Philae, Aswan, Egypt
-
The eloquence of elephants
-
Nesting season for the leatherbacks
-
A wild and scenic scene
-
Thousand Islands region, St. Lawrence River, US-Canada border
-
Hungarian Parliament Building, Budapest, Hungary
-
A cozy winter village
-
Mooncake time
-
Bow Bridge in Central Park, New York City
-
The Rainbow Houses of Houten, Netherlands
-
Total solar eclipse
-
World Jellyfish Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

