The 400 Club
Membership belongs to a select few Illinois birders
(published 6-10-26)
![]() |
| Birders crave "accidentals," like this Roseate Tern at Illinois Beach State Park last month, a first-in-state record of the species. Photo by Matt Zuro. |
“Chasing” is
a way of life for a select cadre of birders like Heimer who seek to grow their Illinois
life list at every opportunity. Of those, a small number have equaled or
surpassed 400 species—a challenging milestone that can take decades to achieve.
Membership
in the so-called 400 Club is open to all, but so far fewer than 20 birders have
joined. Because here’s the thing: When your Illinois list approaches 400
species, it’s hard to see anything new. Birders in such rarified air are lucky
to add one or two species a year.
The Illinois
official bird list totals 460 species.
Of these, about 325 are “regular” in the state—generally found every year. Another
30 or so are rated “casual,” detected far less often.
That leaves about 100 species on the all-time list that are either extinct or “accidental.” Often the accidentals are first-time records, like the Great Kiskadee in Channahon in 2020, and the Broad-tailed Hummingbird in Champaign in 2023.
Roseate Tern
joined the list of legendary sightings on May 23. About 75 birders hurried to
Illinois Beach State Park that day to witness the vagrant seabird, an Illinois
first.
For 400 Club
members and wannabes, the accidentals are must-see birds. Fortunately, digital technology
has made chasing them easier. The internet, smartphones, and free apps like
Discord and eBird changed the game. Reports of an avian Elvis now arrive
instantly.
Keeping
score
![]() |
| Wauconda wonder: This Lazuli Bunting, a surprise visitor from the West, was Illinois species No. 400 for two area birders and a life bird for dozens of spectators. Photo by Stephen Hurst. |
We do know the 400 Club is growing. Listers Corner showed three people at 400 or more species in 2018. Today it’s about a dozen, with several birders peeking in the clubhouse window with Illinois life lists in the high 390s.
Two Chicago birders, Joe Lill and Geoff Williamson, joined the club in April thanks to a wayward Lazuli Bunting using a feeder in Wauconda. Homeowner Jan Merl welcomed birders to her yard to ogle the rare visitor, a western species.
The state’s
top listers know each other well. They travel to the same places to get
glimpses of the same elusive birds. Sometimes they arrive in the same vehicle, tamping
down the notion that these birders are fierce rivals. The 400 Club members I
contacted were all about the birds and just doing what they like to do.
Chicagoan Andy
Sigler claims an Illinois life list of 420 species, and probably none is higher.
A truly statewide birder, Sigler has observed at least 200 species in each of
the 102 counties, itself a remarkable achievement.
![]() |
| This out-of-range Bewick's Wren, spotted near Chicago's Adler Planetarium in April, offered a rare viewing opportunity. Photo by Marky Mutchler. |
Sigler
cherishes the Ross’s Gull he discovered at Cook County’s Gillson Park in 1978,
the first record in Illinois and only the third in the Lower 48.
Heimer, who considers Sigler a mentor, is newer to the game. He remembers being in the 400 Club for about two weeks after bagging a Chestnut-collared Longspur in Chicago in 2024. Then came the news that Hoary Redpoll would no longer count as a distinct species, dropping him back to 399. He regained 400 last year with a Cassin’s Kingbird in Lake County.
Reaching 400
Illinois birds was a singular goal for Heimer. For others, such as Bob Fisher, a
Downers Grove birder, the milestone happens naturally over time.
Fisher and his late wife, Karen, traveled throughout Illinois for birds, a shared passion. On Listers Corner, they still lead the “Buddy List” category.
“It was
about the adventure,” he said. “Four hundred was not a goal but an outcome
because we enjoyed chasing [rare] birds.”
![]() |
| Midwest birders raced to Quincy in 2015 to see this ultra-rare Ivory Gull. Photo by Jackie Bowman. |
Border
games
Ornithological
research sometimes results in changes to the official list of countable birds. European
Goldfinch, for example, was declared a countable Illinois species in 2024.
Birders who had already seen one got to add a bird to their life list without
even leaving home. But it can go the other way, too, as with Hoary Redpoll.
Listing rules can be as quirky as the hobby itself, but birders follow a code of honor that ensures fair play. In the case of geographic borders, another human creation, listing can turn almost comical.
Joel Greenberg,
a 400-clubber from Westmont, recalls a trip to the Ohio River to add Least
Tern. He witnessed several but had to wait until the birds crossed the northern
bank to count them as Illinois birds. The river’s airspace, he knew, is considered
Kentucky.
From end to
end, Illinois runs about 400 miles—a fitting distance for birders in the 400
Club, who endure long road trips routinely. Greenberg’s Ohio River experience
came just after he’d driven 350 miles to check off Bachman’s Sparrow in Johnson
County.
![]() |
| This Lewis's Woodpecker, an Illinois first, shocked feeder watchers at Ballard Nature Center near Effingham, in 2019. Photo by Leroy Harrison. |
Bailey
fondly recalls some amazing Illinois visitors, even keeping a side list of his 38
“best birds.” Among them are Ancient Murrelet, Clark’s Nutcracker, and Northern
Wheatear. He’s proud of the Curlew Sandpiper he discovered in 1986 while
checking a remnant prairie pothole in Vermilion County.
Al Stokie also knows the exhilaration of finding a “mega.” He’ll never forget the Ivory Gull he spotted on a Christmas Bird Count in 1991, at Montrose Point in Chicago. “It’s the only really rare bird that I actually found myself,” Stokie said. To his relief, fellow birders soon verified the gull.
Some birds
get away. When that happens, avid listers feel the pain of missing what can be
a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.
Cindy
Alberico, a Crest Hill resident, chased the state’s first Painted Redstart in
2022. She was on the scene at Lakewood Forest Preserve in Lake County, but the
one-day-wonder ghosted her.
“It was hot
and buggy and after slogging through those woods for about forever I finally
convinced myself that it just wasn’t worth it. I still regret it.”
Alberico’s pursuit,
it must be noted, was compromised by a bum shoulder she’d recently dislocated.
Her memory brightens when recounting the Gyrfalcon she discovered in LaSalle County,
in 2003, and a Black-backed Woodpecker finally viewed in Will County, in 1986. “I
think I looked for that bird five or six times before I got it.”
Persistence is
right up there with time and a full tank of gas when noting the essential assets
of our state’s most prolific bird listers. A treasure hunter’s mentality comes
in handy, too.
Members of
the 400 Club, present and future, are standing by, eager to chase down our
state’s next history-making bird.
Copyright 2026 by Jeff Reiter. All rights reserved.




