If you're involved with Christmas or Breeding Bird Counts, the boundaries of your count circle are always of interest, and sometimes unclear. Count Circle includes the complete National Audubon database of CBCs, with a total of 2883 different count circles in 93 different states and territories including Canada, Mexico, the Caribbean, South America, and Antarctica (updated as of December 2018). Lookup and display any count circle on an interactive map, and find out exactly what is (and is not) included in the circle. The software also displays your current location, so you can determine precisely if you are inside or outside the count circle as you are doing your count.
You can also use Count Circle just to view the different circles, to help you decide which ones you might like to participate in. Display all the circles in your state with one click.
If you have reason to believe the database is in error, Count Circle lets you set the center of the circle, then update the database, and even, if you choose to do so, report the revision directly to National Audubon, who then review the update.
You can also create and save your own circles, and, combined with the ability to display multiple existing circles, this provides the perfect way to position a potential new circle so that it doesn't overlap existing circles. You can even choose the radius (in miles or kilometers) if you want to use something other than the "standard" 7.5 mile radius used for the CBC. A great addition for "patch challenges"!
Note: some reviewers have noted errors in the count circle locations. The data in the app is the latest data direct from the National Audubon Society. Any errors in location stem from that database, NOT from the app! This is precisely why the app includes a feature that lets you report such errors directly to Audubon, so that Audubon can correct such errors in future updates of their database.
Note: Notwithstanding the information in the previous paragraph, Count Circle is not affiliated with nor endorsed by the National Audubon Society. Christmas Bird Count is a trademark of the National Audubon Society.
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Count Circle FAQ
Is Count Circle free?
Yes, Count Circle is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.
Is Count Circle legit?
Not enough reviews to make a reliable assessment. The app needs more user feedback.
The functionality to report changes to Audubon doesn't work. The functionality to leave feedback to the app developers also doesn't work. They never responded to an email I sent explaining these problems. Don't waste your money.
Okay For Quick Check
As I recall, at one point you could enter all the circles you’re involved with. Now it only allows entry on map of one circle at a time. Put in a 2nd one and 1st one disappears...or I’m missing something.
Great for the 5MR Challenge!
If you’re doing the 5MR (five mile radius) local patch challenge, you need this app.
Easy as pie to set up your circle, and you’re off!
Great for rural road edges
If you do a rural route, this app is especially useful for knowing when you reach the edge of the circle on a rural road with no distinctive landmarks.
The app uses the National Audubon Society count circle database, and makes it very obvious how many errors the NAS has in its database. If nothing else, it should prompt NAS to clean up its circle locations. The good news is that you can manually move the circle center on the app to the real location. You can't change the NAS database, but for the purposes of doing your particular circle, you can set it up to use the correct location on your iPad or iPhone.
Very useful for CBCs
Very handy tool to both find a Christmas Bird Count (CBC) circle or for staying inside a circle while conducting a CBC. The developers are very responsive to changes to cout circle locations. I am a CBC compiler and when I entered a correction for the count center that National Audubon Society (NAS) had wrong for sometime (yes, the circle locatons are from NAS, so any location errors belong to NAS), they incorporated the change in the latest version. I hope NAS gets the coordinates correct as well since the correction I submitted went directly to them.
Wish list: Having the ability to see all of the count circles in a given area would be usefull for planning trips as well as gleaning locations where one could go to the NAS dabase for more information. Providing a direct link from a count circle to the NAS database to see historic bird data would also be very handy.
Horrible
Doesn't work
Work in progress
Until count circles get vetted by Audubon, avoid this app. Too many errors in locations of count circles. Lots of potential but released for purchase too early. Two of the first three circles I checked were clearly wrong. The San Antonio, Texas circle excluded Mitchell Lake and the Yanayacu, Ecuador circle was on the wrong side of the Andes.
Fills a definite need
Thanks for a fantastic product! I shared it on Facebook and will include it in the websites for all three CBCs that I compile. I really appreciate the innovative thinking that went into the design of this app. It filled a need that I didn't even know was there. I also use it when I go out to bird my own patch that a is sized like a CBC circle. It’s a great way of birding the edges of my territory and not straying.
birder
I have been a CBC compiler for several counts and also served as a regional CBC editor, so I have a fair idea of what I want to know about a count circle, real or hypothetical. I'd give this app a solid B+. It uses a good map base, the new circles are easy to move around as needed and the existing database of counts is accurate, at least for states with which I am familiar.
What would I add or change? The biggest thing to add is that it needs to show a ghost image of all of the active circles on the map, so that if I want to establish a new circle, I can see where the other nearby circles are. For example, if I want to establish a circle at Waldport, Oregon, I need to avoid bumping into either Newport to the north or Florence to the south. Right now I have to call them up, look at them, remember where the edge is, close that circle and then fiddle with my new boundaries.
The database should be updated each year around November 1, because many states add new circles each year, or drop old ones. Oregon is adding three circles for the 2013 CBC, but they are not in the CC database yet so even if I could see all the state's circles, I might still bump into one because it hasn't been loaded. Since National Audubon adds these new circles to its database in the fall, before the counts happen, CC should be able to download them for an annual update.
The new circle function is a godsend to anyone who wants to make a new circle, because you can keep moving it around til you like it. You don't have to fiddle with new coordinates in Google Earth, or pen-on-mylar. A couple of times I made a new circle and it "stuck" to the map even when I wanted to get rid of it. I had to restart the phone to clear the dead circle. But in general, it works well.
I have noticed a couple of circles that clearly have misplaced centers. I suspect that this is due to goobered numbers in the NAS database rather than anything CC did, but these things need to be fixed by someone somewhere. One nice thing about the CC map is that it is very easy to "proof" where your circle really is, so you can figure out if the location in the database is right. I encourage all compilers to do this.
All in all, a really good start on an app useful to the birding community. I look forward to future versions.
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