Magpie Jay (left) and Toucan (right) in Costa Rica |
A couple weeks ago Olivia Bouler, who wrote and illustrated
Olivia’s Birds, visited Cornell Lab of Ornithology. It was the opening of an
exhibit of her bird paintings – similar to those she painted to raise $200,000
for bird rescue operations following the BP Deep Horizon oil spill – and it was
an opportunity for kids to hear Olivia talk about bird conservation.
Olivia was 11 years old the year oil spilled into the Gulf
of Mexico. She worried that the oil spill would harm the Brown Pelicans that
were nesting at that time, and wanted to do something to help birds. So Olivia
decided to use her art to save the birds.
Olivia & brother Jackson & puffins |
“I promised to make 500 drawings for people who donated
money to the Audubon Society for helping the birds,” she said. She figured she’d
raise a couple hundred dollars; instead she raised $200,000.
“People want to help, but they don’t know how,” Olivia says.
She encourages kids – adults, too – to use their talents to help protect the
planet. “Everyone can do something,” says Olivia. “Find your cause and use your
talents; the quality of our world depends on you.”
For Olivia, “doing something” means continuing to share her
love of birds through her art. “They have personalities, you know,” she says of
the birds in her backyard. Her paintings – and her book – have made Olivia a bird ambassador,
and she’s traveled across the US and to Costa Rica to talk about the need to
conserve bird habitat. Last year the Audubon Society named her an “artist
inspiring conservation”.
Olivia draws a chickadee at Cornell Lab of Ornithology |
This year Olivia’s busy with earth science, math, English and
everything else a typical eighth-grader does. In her free time she’s busy
developing a board game … a cross between Sorry, CandyLand with dice and lots
of chance cards that should be out soon.
"So where do you want to be in a few years?" I ask. "Here," she says. "At Cornell. Studying birds, of course!"
There's a review of Olivia’s Birds over at STEM Friday. Check what
Olivia’s doing on facebook..