Venezuela
Celebrate Birds has been working side by side with AveZona, a community-based organization working in Venezuela to connect people with birds and promote equity in bird watching.
Over the past years, these beautiful materials featuring original art have been co-created to serve communities throughout Venezuela.
Materials and Resources:
Posters:
- Celebrate Urban Birds Focal Species Poster
- Celebrate Urban Birds Focal Bird ID Poster – Resident Species (Side 1)
- Celebrate Urban Birds Focal Bird ID Poster – Resident Species (Side 2)
- Poster of parrots, parkeets, and macaws
- Birds of Chacao (Side 1)
- Birds of Chacao (Side 2)
- Birds of Valencia City (Side 1)
- Birds of Valencia City 2(Side 2)
- Birds of Barquisimeto City
- Birds of Caparo (Barinas)
- Birds of San Felipe City
- Birds of Isla de Coche
Our Educational Guides & Recommended Books
Community Avitourism Guide

Together with Celebrate Urban Birds, the Community Avitourism Group of the Americas has co-created our wonderful Community Avitourism Guide: Guía Para Iniciar Proyectos de Aviturismo Comunitario en Latinoamérica (Community Avitourism Guide for Latin America) – only available in Spanish.
Our motivation was to create a visual and practical guide for anyone who wants to learn about the topic of Community-led Avitourism. This guide was created by community for community and is intended for communities that have historically been excluded from the sciences. If you want to get the guide, please complete this short survey:
Accessible and Inclusive Birding: A Handbook for Educators (in Spanish)

We are happy to share a new handbook with strategies and techniques for engaging people who are blind or have low vision, people with autism spectrum disorder (ASD).
This guide was cocreated by Veo Aves Falcón from Venezuela.
You can download this educational guide for free!
A Collective eBook Comes to Light

A bilingual online learning community, comprised of 50 committed and passionate leaders and educators, was supported by EECapacity, a National Training program of the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). This group exchanged their unique insight and ideas over the course of about a year. At the conclusion of the dialogue project, many participants decided to showcase what they learned by sharing programs and projects with Latino communities throughout the United States, Mexico, Puerto Rico, and Cuba, in a free virtual publication (eBook). We invite you to download this eBook with the hope that it will help and encourage your work. We hope you are inspired to adapt and achieve similar innovative programs and projects in your community. Let us know how it goes for you!
