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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 01:11   #1
Kevin Purcell
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Birding in the United States: A Demographic and Economic Analysis

On July 15 2009 by the USFWS released Birding in the United States: A Demographic and Economic Analysis

A copy of the PDF can be downloaded here:

http://library.fws.gov/Pubs/birding_natsurvey06.pdf

For 2006 data they estimate expenditure on Wildlife-watching equipment to be $6,869,054,000.

They define Wildlife-watching equipment as: "Equipment expenditures consist of binoculars, cameras, bird food, nest boxes, day packs, and other wildlife-watching equipment."

They say there are 47,693,000 birdwatchers in the USA defined pretty much as anyone who pays attention to birds. For people who travel away from home to see birds they say there are 19,860,000 people. Make of that what you will.

So average equipment expenditure per birdwatcher is 6869 million / 47.693 million or about $144 per year.

Interesting ballpark figure for estimating how much people spend on bins (or spotting scopes and backpacks and cameras and bird food) per year.


Last edited by Kevin Purcell : Thursday 16th July 2009 at 04:09.
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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 01:25   #2
KCFoggin
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Well, I can unhappily say I was a part of that expenditure and the grand I just kicked out today probably isn't in that count.
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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 01:39   #3
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?
OK, what did you get, new scope?
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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 02:56   #4
Lisa W
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I was definitely part of that expenditure - much to my partner's dismay.
Yeah, KC, what did you get?
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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 09:38   #5
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Interesting that 54% of American birders as defined in this study are female.
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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 11:06   #6
Pileatus
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Interesting that 54% of American birders as defined in this study are female.
In the US, women increasingly outnumber men past the age of 35.
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Old Thursday 16th July 2009, 11:24   #7
ThoLa
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In the US, women increasingly outnumber men past the age of 35.
Germans are said to go extinct. Could you send me a collection of photos of US women (preferably less than 35 ): we might offer speeded immigration.
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 01:47   #8
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Well stick me at the far end of that bell-shaped curve.

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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 17:08   #9
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Interesting - birders in Europe are usualy male and 15-30 years old.

There was even a joke about female birder and guinea pig.
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 17:13   #10
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Interesting - birders in Europe are usualy male and 15-30 years old.
?????!!!!!! what??!! do you not have playstations and cell phone texting over there? shocking
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 17:15   #11
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We have birding rings texting messages about rarieties to each other.
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 17:18   #12
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thumbs up for the kids!! :)
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 18:43   #13
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Huh... I find most birders in Sweden to be male and 40+. I usually feel very odd as a woman of 27...

Don't want to think about how much money I've spent on equipment though, but on the other hand... a good scope can last for 20+ years. :)
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 19:54   #14
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I've spent some money this year on bird watching: feeder - $39, binos - $320, another bino - $370, books - 80, iTouch bird apps - $70, plus bird food. Oh, a safari vest ans safari shirt to look cool with my binos - $85 total.
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Old Friday 17th July 2009, 20:10   #15
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books - 80
Obviously you do not have enough books yet. Do you have the one on the gulls yet?

[I do not have it either. Yet.]

I have a fishing shirt. Same as safari shirt I guess. And green pants. Must have green pants. No camo.
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Old Saturday 18th July 2009, 14:12   #16
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And don't forget the Tilley hat !
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Old Saturday 18th July 2009, 15:51   #17
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Very interesting information. Surprised that they did not include numbers for Washington D.C., where many people claim to have seen the federal-eagle money bird who was rumored to poop on Fridays. Maybe now it has become more of a bird of prey.
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Old Sunday 19th July 2009, 06:53   #18
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I have a fishing shirt. Same as safari shirt I guess. And green pants. Must have green pants. No camo.


As long as you look cool. That's all that matters!
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Old Monday 20th July 2009, 16:48   #19
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....$144.00....per YEAR?!....that survey couldn't have included all the US posters on this website. Now if you move the decimal pt over a place......2 binos in the last 12mo, along with a Maxpledition over-the-shoulder tote, and I still need a new NG Birds of NA (am waiting, tho, as taxonomy is supposedly changing, and that will make old and current versions...obselescent at least)....and will also now need to get green trou and a Tilley hat (like in Jennifer Tilley? Does she deliver the hat...and maybe go along on a bird outing to the deep woods to make sure the hat is satisfactory?).

But seriously folks, 6B+ is one helluva lotta scopes/spyglasses and birdfood/feeders......

T%
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Old Wednesday 29th July 2009, 20:59   #20
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It probably didn't include all the US posters here, but even all of us aren't spending that much on birding (I'm easily under their $144 per year line). I know plenty of the anomaly under 30 pawn shop binocular nomadic bird work crowd that might have a $20 pair of binoculars and a couple of field guides.
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Old Thursday 30th July 2009, 04:14   #21
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kevin Purcell View Post
On July 15 2009 by the USFWS released Birding in the United States: A Demographic and Economic Analysis

A copy of the PDF can be downloaded here:

http://library.fws.gov/Pubs/birding_natsurvey06.pdf

....
Good find, Kevin.
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Old Thursday 30th July 2009, 10:32   #22
pete_gamby
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As I'm researching the US market right now this was a great find (thanks to Wildbird magazine for pointing me to it a couple of weeks ago). I just wonder why its taken three years to put the numbers together :-)

Out of interest I mapped the data on birders per state from that report against the number of threads per state posted in on Birdforum and the numbers correlate remarkably well. Arizona generates a relatively higher number of threads on here as does Florida - birders "migrate" as much as birds (as detailed in the report on page 9) :-)

Last edited by pete_gamby : Thursday 30th July 2009 at 10:45.
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Old Thursday 30th July 2009, 12:31   #23
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So average equipment expenditure per birdwatcher is 6869 million / 47.693 million or about $144 per year.
Interesting ballpark figure for estimating how much people spend on bins (or spotting scopes and backpacks and cameras and bird food) per year.
My wife and I spend very little on equipment: This year only $50-$60 for a Sibley pocket guide, a cap and a bino harness. But I'm sure we spend much more than $144 each a year on travel (mainly gasoline) for birding trips, plus entrance fees to sites; plus insect repellent! Then there's bird food ...

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Old Friday 31st July 2009, 19:31   #24
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Originally Posted by pete_gamby View Post
As I'm researching the US market right now this was a great find (thanks to Wildbird magazine for pointing me to it a couple of weeks ago). I just wonder why its taken three years to put the numbers together :-)

Out of interest I mapped the data on birders per state from that report against the number of threads per state posted in on Birdforum and the numbers correlate remarkably well. Arizona generates a relatively higher number of threads on here as does Florida - birders "migrate" as much as birds (as detailed in the report on page 9) :-)
that's an interesting find.
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Old Friday 31st July 2009, 20:52   #25
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Itīs a source of constant intrigue to me that so many birders in the US are female. Exactly the opposite here...I canīt count on the fingers of one hand the female birders I know, but could rattle off the names of about 150 male birders (there are said to be about 400 "serious" birders in Ireland South).
Typically, male birders here donīt admit to the activity after puberty kicks in, because the image of the Irish/British birder is a geeky anorak with horn-rimmed glasses and no social skills, in the same league as a Train-Spotter (I, of course, shatter this stereotype....). So the average female here would run a mile from a birding male, were he to admit to the pursuit. In the U.S., I imagine, "Birding" is out there with all the Frontier/Pioneer/Backwoods pursuits, and a Real Man is not afraid to admit to it, as it puts him in the same league as Grizzly Adams, Daniel Boone or Davy Crockett. Or maybe U.S. women reckon a birding man is good child-rearing material as heīs closer to nature and the "Wild", and possibly all sensitive and understanding to boot. Here, womenfolk might feed birds in their gardens and look at blackbirds feeding young, but they would rarely describe themselves as "birders". At the risk of being attacked with a spotting scope on my next outing, I would dare to suggest that most (of the very few) female birders here are women of...shall we say....advanced wisdom and experience.......(is there a fox-hole around here I can bunker down in?) I mean, when I was young, I knew a few other guys who birdwatched, but I was well over forty before I met any female birder.
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