A Queer Ornithology is an ongoing investigation of language that explores queer Indigenous identity and interspecies-relational philosophy through deep observation of the natural world, including wild birds, which the speaker "invites" via ceremonial invocation, dream, and literal cultivation of habitat in the context of a contemporary urban landscape. Drawing from historical ornithological and ontological texts that reflect Western practices of observing and cataloguing avian species and establishing "standards" of natural philosophical thought, the project seeks to offer an alternate, queer, indigenous perspective and decolonial approach to the same. Each collage/poem contains the speaker's Indigenous language (fino CHamoru), secondary language (English), and avian language (in the form of a readable spectrogram). Additional poems narrate the speaker’s experience of tending a habitat as invocation.