SOME
JANUARY BIRDS
IT seems to be our
lot this winter to
have April continually smiling up in the face of January. Again and
again the north wind has come down upon us and set his adamantine face
against all such folly. The turf has become flint; the ice has been
eight inches thick on pond and placid stream, and the very next
morning, maybe, the soft air has breathed of spring, and bluebirds have
twittered deprecatingly as if glad to be here, but altogether ashamed
to be found so out of season. As a matter of fact, of course, some
bluebirds winter with us, but they don't warble "cheerily o" in the
teeth of the north winds. On those days you must seek them in the
cuddly seclusion of dense evergreens, more than likely among close-set
cedars where the blue cedar-berries are still sweet and plenty. But we
have had many days in this January of 1909 when the bluebirds have had
a right to feel called to at least take a hurried glimpse at the bird
boxes or the holes in the old apple trees, just as people take a flying
trip to the summer cottage on a warm Sunday; they know they can't stay,
but it is delightful to just look it over and plan.
I think the crows,
though they are tough
old winter residents, have something of the same impulse to plan nests
and make eyes and cooing conversation, one to another. To-day I heard,
in the pine treetops of a little pasture wood where several pair nest
every year, the unmistakable note. In that great song of Solomon which
the whole outdoor world will chorus in the full tide of spring the
crows have the bass part, no doubt, but they sing it none the less
musically. It is surprising what a croak can become, between lovers.
I saw them slip away
silently and
shamefacedly as I approached, and I knew them for callow youngsters,
high school age, let us say, to whom shy lovemaking is never quite out
of season. But they got their come-uppance the moment they sailed out
of the grove, for their appearance was greeted with a wild and raucous
chorus of crow ha-ha-ha's. High in the air, flapping round and round in
silence above the pines, a half dozen riotous youngsters of their own
age had been observing them, chuckling no doubt and winking to one
another, and now that the culprits were driven out into the open where
all could see them the chorus of jeers knew no bounds. It was as
unmistakable as the caressing tone, this jeering laughter. You had but
to hear it to know very well what they were saying. The crow language
has but one word, which in type is caw. But their inflections and tone
qualities are such that it is easy to make it express the whole
diatonic scale of primitive emotion.
Many of our summer
birds whose winter
range barely includes us seem to be more than usually prevalent this
winter. It may be that the mild season has to do with this, but it is
equally probable that a plenitude of food is more directly responsible.
Seed-eating birds are particularly in luck this year. I do not know of
a winter when the birch trees have fruited so plentifully, nor have I
noticed so many flocks of song sparrows as this year. I find them
twittering happily along through the wood, hanging in quite
unsparrow-like attitudes from slender birch twigs, busy robbing the
pendant cones of their tiny seeds. In the summer you know the song
sparrow as a very erect bird. He sits on some topmost twig of cedar or
berry bush and pours forth quite the cheeriest and sweetest home song
of the pasture land. Or perchance he flies, and the usual short and
oft-repeated refrain seems to be broken up by flutter of his wings into
a longer, softer, and more varied song that has less of challenge and
more of sweet content in it. In his winter notes, which are really
nothing but a cheery twittering, I always think I hear something of the
mellow singing quality of this song of the wing.
To-day I saw a
sharp-shinned hawk,
hunting noiselessly, no doubt for these same sparrows. He flitted among
the treetops like a nervous flash of slaty gray, and was gone so
quickly that had I not heard the welt of his wing tips on the resisting
air as he turned a sharp corner I should never have seen him. Most of
our hawks, though well known to take an occasional chicken, are mouse
and grasshopper eaters. The sharp-shinned is the real chicken hawk, for
he eats more birds than anything else, though the small songsters of
the thicket form the greater part of his diet. I have rarely seen him
here in winter, though his summer nest is common in the deep woods,
with its cream-buff eggs heavily blotched with chocolate brown. Just as
the plenitude of food of their kind kept the song sparrows with us to
enjoy the mild weather, so I think the multitude of song sparrows and
other succulent tidbits made the sharp-shinned hawk willing to winter
where he had summered.
All these birds which
are wintering as
far north as they dare seem to come out and cheer up in the April-like
days, but in those which are distinctly January you may tramp the woods
for days and not see one of them. The flicker is a rather common bird
with us the winter through. In a warm January rain you will often
surprise him wandering about in the thawed fields, looking for iced
crickets and half concealed grubs and chrysalids among the stubble. Let
the snow come deep and the wind blow out of the north and the flicker
vanishes from the landscape. It is as if he had gone into a hole and
pulled his thirty-six nicknames in after him, so completely has the
flicker disappeared. He is a strong winged bird and I have always been
willing to think that at such times he simply whirled aloft on the
northerly gale and never lighted till he was a few hundred miles to the
south. He could do it easily enough. He would find bare ground and good
feeding in the tidewater country of Virginia when New England is three
feet under snow and the zero gales are drifting it deeper and freezing
the heart out of the very trees in the wood.
The other day,
though, I caught one of
them sitting in the hollow of an ancient apple tree. There was an
opening of some size facing the south into which the midday sun shone
with refreshing warmth. Here, sheltered from the bite of the north wind
the flicker had tucked himself away and was enjoying his sunny nook
much as pigeons do in just the right angle of the city cornices. But he
was better off than the pigeons for there were fat rubs in the decaying
wood that formed his shelter and he could use his meal ticket without
leaving his lodgings. Our woods are full of such hostelries and they
shelter more of the woodland creatures than we know as we tramp
carelessly by.
But if the bluebirds
and flickers hide
themselves securely through the coldest winter days and the song
sparrows and even the crows are apt to be scarce and subdued, as is
certainly the case in my woods, there are other feathered folk who seem
to delight in the cold and be never so gay as when the sky is leaden,
the wind bites, and the frost flakes, of snow squalls let the still
struggle through the upper atmosphere because it is too bitter cold to
really snow. Of these the chickadees lead. They seem to be never as so
merry as when they hear the sweet music of the tinkle of cold-tense
snow crystals on the bare twigs.
In spite of the soft
raiment in which
the weather garbs itself to-day it is only three days ago that the
great organ of the woods piped to the northerly wind as it breathed
pedal notes through the pines and piped shrill in the chestnut twigs.
And there was more than organ music. The white and red oaks, still
holding fast to their brown leaves, gave forth the rattling of a
million delicate castanets, and the wind drew like a soft bow across
the finer strings of the birches so that all among slender twigs you
heard this fine tone of a muted violin singing a little tender song of
joy. For the trees were sadly weary of being frozen one day and thawed
the next. They thought the real winter was at hand when the cold would
be continuous and the snow deep. All northern-bred folk love the real
winter and feel defrauded of our birthright if we do not get
it.
There are other feathered folk
who
seem to delight in
the cold
Strangest of all were
the beeches.
They have held the lower of their tan-pale leaves and with
them
have whispered of snow all winter long. Whatever the day, you had but
to stand among them with closed eyes and you could hear the beech word
for snow going tick, tick, tick, all about. It seemed as if flakes must
he falling and hitting the leaves so plainly they spoke it. Now that
the flakes were beginning the beeches never said a word, but just stood
mute and watched it come and listened to the music of all the other
trees. Or perhaps they listened to something finer yet. It was only in
their enchanted silence that I thought I heard it. Now and then the
wind held its breath and the oak leaf castanets ceased and then for a
second I would be sure of it; an elfin tinkle so crepuscular, so
gossamer fine that it was less a sound than a thought, the ringing of
snow crystal on snow crystal as the feathery flakes touched and
separated in the frost-keen air. It surely was there and the beech
trees heard it and stood breathless in solemn joy at the sound.
The chickadees were
very happy that day.
Little groups of half a dozen flipped gaily from tree to tree, bustling
awkwardly and jovially about picking up food continually, though it is
rarely possible to see what they get as they glean from limb to limb.
Winter is the time for sociability, say the chickadees, and they
welcome to their number the red-breasted nuthatches that have followed
the season down from the Maine woods. The chickadee in his cheery
endeavors to take his own in the way of food where he finds it does
some surprising acrobatic feats, but they are almost always clumsy and
you expect him momentarily to break his neck. Not so the nuthatch. He
runs along the under side of a limb with his back to the ground as
easily as he would run along the upper side. He comes down the smooth
trunk of a pine head down, just as a squirrel does, his feet seeming to
be reversible and to stick like clamps wherever he cares to put them.
All the time his busy little head is poking here and there
with
sinuous agility and his slim, pointed bill is gathering in the same
invisible food, no doubt, that the chickadee is after. And as he eats
he talks, a quaint high-pitched, nasal drawl of yna, yna, yna, that
gets on your nerves after a while and you are glad to see him let go
his upside-down hold, turn a flip-flap in the air, and light on another
tree some distance away. I think Stockton got his idea of negative
gravity from watching the nuthatches. If I were mean enough to shoot
one I should as soon expect to see him fall tip into the sky as down to
the earth, so usually regardless and defiant is he toward the proper
and accepted force of gravity.
Quite prim and
upright as compared with
these shifty wrigglers is the third boon companion of these winter day
expeditions, the downy woodpecker. You are not so apt to find him as
the other two, for his work is deeper and more laborious and they are
likely to flit flightily away while he still drills and ogles. Yet you
can hear him much farther away than the others, and it is not difficult
to slip quietly up and see him at his work. Prim and erect he stands on
some rotten stub, his stiff tail-feathers jabbing it to hold
him
steady, his head now driving his nail-like bill with taps like those of
a busy carpenter's hammer, anon speeding up till it has almost the
effect of an electric buzzer. Then he looks solemnly with one eye in at
the hole that he has made, prods again eagerly and pulls out a fat
white grub, gulps it, and goes hop-toading up the stub looking for more
probe possibilities. Or perhaps he writes scrawly
ms.
in the
atmosphere as he flits jerkily over to
the next tree that pleases him.
Thus though not of a
feather these three
flock together in the biting cold of winter days and seem to he cheery
and courageous if not exactly contented. They are all hole-born and
hole-building birds and when night overtakes them they know well where
to find wind-proof hollow trunks where they may snuggle,
round
and warm in their fluffed out feathers till dawn calls them to work
again.
Yet, with all the
yearning of the trees
and the joy of the woodland creatures in the prospect of snow it ended
in no snow storm. All day long the sun shone palely through a frost fog
and the frost crystals sprang out of it at the touch of the icy wind
and tinkled into snowflakes right before your eyes. The wind swept a
feathery fluff together in corners but at nightfall when the moon shone
through a clearer air and a near-zero temperature the crystals had
begun to evaporate, and by morning hardly a trace of them was left.
To-day it is April-like; to-morrow we may have zero weather again and
before these words get into print perhaps the yearned-for snow will
have come and with its kindly shelter covered the succulent green
things of pasture and woodland that need it so badly.
It is wonderful,
though, how they stand
freezing and thawing and yet remain green, firm in texture, and
wholesome. The birds of the air have feathers which they can fluff out
and make into a down puff for a winter night covering. Here in the pine
grove is the pipsissewa starring the ground with its rich green clumps.
It is as full of color and sap, seemingly, as it was in July when its
fragrant wax-like blossoms starred its green with pink. No cell of the
fleshy texture of its green leaves is broken nor is there a tarnish in
their gloss. Its seedpod stands dry on a dry scape in place of its
flower, but that alone shows the difference between summer and winter.
Yet it stands naked to the north wind protected by neither
feathers nor fur. Who can tell me by what principle it remains so? Why
is the thin-leaved pyrola and the partridge berry, puny creeping vine
that it is, still green and unharmed by frost when the tough, leathery
leaves of the great oak tree not far off are withered and brown?
Chlorophyl, and
cellular structure, and
fibro-vascular bundles in the one plant wither and lose color and turn
brown at a touch of frost. In another not ten feet away they stand the
rigors of our northern winters and come out in the spring, seemingly
unharmed and fit to carry on the internal economy of the plant's life
until it shall produce new leaves to take their places. Then in the
mild air of early summer these winter darers fade and die. Here in the
swamp the tough and woody cat-o'-nine-tails is brown and papery to the
tip of its six-foot stalk. The blue flag that was a foot high is brown
and withered alongside it, yet the tender young leaves of the
Ranunculus repens growing between the two and not having a
tenth of
their strength are tender and young and green and unharmed still. The
first two died at a touch of the frost. The buttercup leaves have been
frozen and thawed a score of times without hurt.
You might guess that
the swamp water has
an elixir in it that saves the life of the repens; but how about the Ranunculus
bulbosus, European cousin of the repens? That grows on the
sandy
hillside, and even the root tips that extend below its little white
bulb have been frozen stiff a score of times since the woody stemmed
goldenrod beside it dropped dead, sere and brown, at the first good
freeze. Yet to-day in the smiling sun I found the young leaves of the
Ranunculus bulbosus green and succulent and unharmed of their cellular
structure, and so I am sure they will remain, under the snow or bare,
as the case may be when the first yellow bud pushes upward from that
white bulb where it is now patiently waiting the word. Our botanists
who study heroically to find some minute variation in form that they
may add another Latin name to their text-books might study these
variations in habit and result and tell me the reason for them. I'd be
glad to buy some more books on botany; but none that I have seen have
so far within their pages any explanation of this puzzle.
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