Lack of binders in the competition does kind of make it more interesting, but I think that using binders would give the writes an all-new sense of freedom in the questions. If we use a binder to study, I think we should be able to use it in the event.
I misinterpreted the rules on field guides, and didn't realize that some information might not have been in them. I don't think I ever seriously sat down to study birds last year- not like I did for anatomy at least (somehow I placed at Nationals

). Oh right, the calls- I studied the vocalizations.
In all honesty, I think that vocalizations are kind of ridiculous to include in the event. It can take a professional birder years to learn vocalizations by heart. Does that mean that someone who is a student in middle or high school with a lot of other things to do should have to learn them just the same way in 9 months? I know we have to learn less calls than a professional birder, but it still takes a lot of time that could be dedicated to learning things for your other events.
At the very least, the rules should explicitly say that calls should only be used in ID-only stations. That way, if you don't get the call, you don't get screwed on everything else too. Have five or six or ten calls- the number doesn't matter. They kind of did it that way at Nationals, but they had very limited question as well.
Can you say "long post"?
