Birds in my Backyard is Live!

Picture Books

It’s finally here (queue the celebratory cold brew coffee)! I can finally say that “Birds in My Backyard: A Suburban Safari” is officially published. It can be purchased here.

This is my 2nd self-published picture book. The story, the illustrations, the research….all a labor of love and months of work late into the night when I should have been sleeping.

This book is so important to me for a few reasons:

Its a homage to all the women who cultivated a love of nature in me as a young child
  • Its something that has remained with me and I hope to instill it in my children, too
  • It’s a small way to honor their memory now and in the future
I hope it helps bring attention to the outside world to young readers and their families
  • I don’t need to rehash how overly connected we are in this day and age, I’m sure you hear it all the time.
  • I hope my book serves as a gentle reminder to get out of the house and explore! Even if it’s not to birdwatch, but just get outside for a while.
I got to draw birds and share something I’m passionate about, birdwatching
  • I’ve had this “Old-Lady hobby” (as social media coins it now) for years, ever since I bought my 1st bird feeder and a bag of cheap birdseed
  • Birdwatching can be accessible and enjoyed by people of all ages
  • As you begin to recognize bird species in your local community, you begin to notice other small things as well. It helps you notice the beauty in nature; the bugs, birds, and other critters we share our neighborhoods with.

I’m so proud of this book and am so excited to have found a vendor that produces high quality books, the hardcover is great, the pages are crisp and brilliant in color. So glad to have moved away from KDP.

After you’ve read it a couple of times, let me know what you and the children in your life think of it! What’s your favorite bird?


Here’s an excellent checklist by a local birding group, Beckham Bird Club that perfectly sums up how to get more involved with birdwatching. Some are more specific to Kentucky but use it as a jumping off point to research what resources you have in your community.

How to get involved in birding:

  1. Attend Beckham Bird Club meetings, especially if you have never been to one.
  2. Come along on a Beckham Bird Club field trip, especially if you have never been on one.
  3. After doing the first two things on this list, join the Beckham Bird Club. It’s easy to do on this website from the Membership tab
  4. Obtain a good pair of binoculars and both a hard copy and phone app field guide. Use them frequently.
  5. Join the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology’s eBird and Merlin sites. They’re free and easy to use, and they are a great way to record your bird observations and find and identify birds.
  6. If you have a yard, research how to make it bird friendly by adding native plants, feeders and water sources.
  7. Join the Kentucky Ornithological Society (KOS).
  8. Subscribe to the birdKY listserv via KOS. It’s a great way to know what’s going on with birds in Kentucky. 
  9. Attend one of the KOS meetings in April or September.
  10. Donate to the BBC Birdathon.
  11. Familiarize yourself with the American Birding Association’s Code of Birding Ethics (see Birding Ethics under the Conservation tab above) and adhere to it when birding.
  12. Get out and bird in one of Kentucky’s least-birded counties. Kentucky has a substantial portion of the counties with the fewest eBird checklists. You can help fix that.
  13. Attend a birding festival in Kentucky or elsewhere.
  14. Take a child birding.
  15. Donate your old/unused binoculars and scopes to nature centers, school groups interested in birding.
  16. Bird, bird, and bird some more.

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