It’s amazing to me how little people notice about the different birds, even though I was one of those clueless people not that many years ago. I was the one who’d never heard of a lesser goldfinch even though we’ve got more of them in the garden than anything else. Most people know how to navigate the digital world but don’t know much about the living world. Even my knowledgeable neighbor once remarked how happy she was to see the American goldfinches come back in the spring. Our goldfinches don’t come back. They never leave. She just didn’t recognize them in their snappy brown winter suits.

I didn’t even notice the obvious stuff. Like, at one point I was completely perplexed by being dive-bombed by crows. I suspected a nest was involved, but it seemed like a case of poor character judgment to me. I was not aware I was probably a few feet away from a big ol’ blue-eyed baby crow on the ground, during the two or three days it’s blundering around trying to figure out how to flap wings. Once it’s airworthy, Mom and Dad will leave me alone. It’s good to understand these things. Otherwise you might be tempted to haul off and smack a crow, and that’s an excellent way to be tormented by that crow and all her descendants for the rest of your natural days.

Education is the antidote to ennui. Because learning about the world sharpens up our noticers, and noticing limbers up the neurons so they can swat away boredom. That is why, thanks to recent research, I’m now looking forward to seeing my next earwig because I’ll know if it’s a girl or a boy. I learned how to tell them apart by their tail sproingers.

Most people don’t need to know much about hummingbirds to appreciate them. They’re compelling enough on their own. We have several species around here but by far the most common is special, even by hummer standards. Anna’s Hummingbird, like the goldfinch, doesn’t go anywhere for the winter. Little suckers either stay put or are replaced by others just like them; the crew is here all year, and the horny little bastards have a super-long breeding season.

So we hang a nectar feeder all winter, and have to make sure it isn’t frozen up by dawn. I have a surprise for them this year. I just planted a hummingbird plant that blooms in the winter, it says here on the label. It’s not a native. It’s a floral accent, and that accent is Australian. I’m hoping it will let me sleep in some icy morning.

The male Anna’s seduction routine is spectacular. They bullet up high in the sky, hover for a moment, and then bomb straight down at a billion miles per hour in front of a likely female and pull up just before a fatal planetary impact. The spreading of the tail feathers to pull out of the dive is so sharp it makes a chirp, and not just any minor chip-note but a distinctive eruption much like the one your smoke alarm makes in the middle of the night.

So every time I hear that mega-chirp, my head snaps straight up and there’s the little zipper up there in the sky, like a tittle on a page, getting ready to do it again. Over and over, every thirty seconds. I can’t think of a season they don’t do this, so it must be fun.

It was an ornithologist who got to the bottom of the chirp sound by removing some tail feathers from the bottom of the bird and seeing what happens. Sure enough, no chirp. Just a tiny splat. Ornithologists. I swear.

Anyway, I’ve been watching this display for years, and that’s how I managed to notice an individual. Any time your neurons get limber enough to pick an individual critter from the herd, you have vanquished boredom for good. You’re invested. This particular hummingbird has been doing the dive all afternoon but hasn’t eked out a chirp yet. I think he’s just a kid. You can tell he’s trying but he just can’t commit. He’s not starting high enough, for starters, and if you’re going to butt-chirp you have to get up some speed. Like, enough that if you didn’t pull up again you might burst into flame during re-entry. It’s got to be scary at first and that flight path needs to look like a “J.” This guy is more of a wide “U.” I can’t blame him. But he’s working on it, and before long he’ll be either impressing females right and left, or just annoying them to the point they give in so they can get some sleep. By that time I won’t be able to tell him from the other male hummingbirds, gorgeous assholes, every one.

But I’m not bored.

If there are nonbinary earwigs, don’t tell me.