Notes and photos from the Spring 2018 Tracking and Bird Language class at Santa Rosa Junior College
Our class began on March 18, 2018 at Santa Rosa Junior College! We had one in-classroom meeting with our instructor Jim Sullivan before hitting the dirt. Over the next several months we met in different locations out on the Sonoma Coast to put in our dirt time and learn from wise and experienced folks - internationally certified trackers Jim and Ginger.
Learn more about Jim Sullivan's tracking classes and see his class calendar here: http://www.animaltrackingandbirdlanguage.com/
Some recollections of what we learned in this class:
We learned that tracking can be a deep portal to connecting with nature and to our own self-knowledge. As we watch and learn from the animals we track and trail, we become more aware of what we ourselves our projecting. Tracking is about seeing the bigger picture - about getting inside the animal's mind and about hearing the story the tracks and sign are telling us.
Some important practices to cultivate for good tracking skills:
- Stay oriented - what direction are you facing? Where's the sun? Is there wind? What's the wind direction? We learned that animals can detect scent about 300 feet UPWIND of the emanating individual! Awareness of this is key when trailing, especially - following an animal in real time.
- Look back often to see the landscape from a different perspective.
- Look up.
- Notice the horizon - the shapes, colors and shadows and how they change as you walk through the landscape.
- Notice ecotone changes – don’t just step out into a different habitat, such as moving from a treeline to grassland, but quietly observe before you move between the biological communities and you may notice natural animal movement and other signs and sounds. (An ecotone is a region of transition between two biological communities.).
And there are three questions to help form the bigger picture:
- What am I seeing?
- What is it telling me?
- What does it mean?
We also learned that tracks fall generally into 3 categories: Fresh, recent and old. It's important to learn about and observe the characteristics of tracks in each of these timelines to help round out the animal's story.
This tracking class also focuses on bird language, which is a more immediate experience of being aware of the birds and animals you encounter as you move through the tracking landscape. Not just alert and alarm calls that can tell a tracker about other animals who may be moving in his or her vicinity and that the birds and animals are aware of the tracker's presence - Also the normal, everyday communications we hear when we quietly observe birds and animals interacting with each other. Like the story Jim shared about his friend who overheard a mountain lion mama conversing with her kittens in a variety of vocalizations as they moved down the trail, unaware of the friend's presence. We learned that bird language is very much a part of a tracker's awareness in observing more complete stories around animal sign and can also bring incredible personal experiences.
Trailing an animal is different from tracking. Trailing is about flow in real time. Don’t look down. Keep your head up, on a swivel, watching for signs and embrace your gut instinct as you move. If you get too caught up in the ground right in front of you and the tracks you're seeing, you'll lose the immediacy of the trail as the animal ahead of you leaves it, and he or she will be off and beyond!
Our reality is affected by what we know. Tracking builds pattern recognition as we put in dirt time and become familiar with all the different tracks and sign we're bound to come across. And tracking is about gratitude and humility - we only learn when we're wrong. It's not about being right, it's about being present, dedicated and involved in what's being seen.
Tracking is about making meaning of what we see. We can connect with and use that meaning by holding our truth lightly. We don't need to take the truth down to the bone every time. Tracking is about 80% on correct calls and one of the great beauties is that it's ok to ask a question and not have the answer. Not knowing is knowing. We learned to hold a sacred question box in our minds for what is observed but unanswerable in the moment. It's ok to make a best call with the information we have and not always be right, because that's how we learn.
And we learned that tracking has ancient roots, that we all descend from tracking cultures. Tracking is about community - there's strength in observing together, having a dialogue and learning from each other. It's also important to have a special place to go for putting in dirt time. Become familiar with that place, it's changes as the seasons come and go and the species and resources that reside there. It's important to track with others in a community context but to also go out alone and build self-knowledge and pattern recognition in the silence of your own observations and reflections. (And you'll also see more animals!)
One other quick note: When taking photos of tracks, using a ruler is essential for scale and to help tell the difference between, say, a Canada goose track and a mallard or a Common Raven and an American Crow. Also, a ruler gives scale for to help tell the difference between things like a bobcat track and a mountain lion track!
And finally, I'm working with a great tracking and sign book right now that both Jim and Ginger recommended called Mammal Tracks & Sign: A Guide to North American Species by Mark Elbroch. (Stackpole Books) It's a fantastic reference manual with tons of information including gaits, track information and animal sign.
Following are some images taken at different locations throughout the class.