Memories of Long-Ago Birds

Photograph by Egon Voyd/Flickr

Memories of Long-Ago Birds

For Audubon’s field editor, these recollections enrich his birdwatching and his being

By Frank Graham Jr.
Published: 01/23/2013

In his 1947 classic of nature writing, Spring in Washington, Louis J. Halle described a moment of intense personal experience while watching birds early one March. Halle had arrived at Dyke Marsh, across the Potomac River from the nation’s capital, when he heard a thin, insect-like sound. After groping briefly for a name, he recognized the song as that of the season’s first yellow-throated warbler. Though this State Department official and part-time writer knew the importance of birds in conservation, ecology, commerce, and agriculture, he was witness now to their role in the seasons unfolding, to their place in his own life.

“The appreciation of birds, indeed the appreciation of all the phenomena of spring, cannot be dissociated from the accumulations of memory,” he wrote later. “The appearance of a familiar bird immediately awakens a train of forgotten associations, and this makes each spring transcend its predecessor. The interest accumulates and is compounded. The first yellow-throated warbler next year will be the more meaningful to me as it brings back that moment in the woods opposite Dyke.”

Halle’s response is, for me, the resonance a bird sets off between time and place. Again and again, the sight of a certain species triggers associations in my mind. When I watch a black-and-white warbler, I am immediately taken back nearly half a century to the day I bought my first truly functional binoculars.

Before that, the small birds I watched through a pair of hand-me-down “opera glasses” appeared blurry, dingy, remote. When I raised to my eyes my new Japanese-made binoculars for the first time, in New York’s Central Park, there appeared a black-and-white warbler as I had never before seen one: resplendent in its fresh nuptial plumage, every detail clear and sharp. It was a revelation. The memory of that long-ago bird has never left me; it amplifies my pleasure every time I see one of its descendants.

That same kind of pleasure recurs for me each spring, with a veery, an Arctic tern, a blue-gray gnatcatcher. I return to individuals of the same species, to beautiful places I have seen them, to memories of good friends who shared this pleasure, even to past readings of memorable texts or viewings of evocative pictures. 

A poem or a painting may spring to mind, renewing the image of a bird now part of my memories and cultural heritage, redoubling a sighting’s pleasure. I recall that Thoreau marveled at the scarlet tanager, flying “through the green foliage as if it would ignite the leaves.” Longfellow sang of the bluebird, “balanced on some topmost spray, flooding with melody the neighborhood.” From her Massachusetts home, Emily Dickinson watched a hummingbird and bobolink and noted to a friend that “the wind blows gay today and the jays bark like blue terriers.”

Of these associations, Louis Halle wrote, “When I go into the woods with someone who does not share them, and listen to the song of a bird, I am sometimes struck by the fact that he hears something altogether different from what I hear. His ear is differently attuned. One must share common memories in order to share common experiences.”

For many of us, those begin in childhood. When I was six or seven, a relative gave me a picture book of backyard birds. With the volume in hand, I looked out a window and saw in a bush a black bird with red wing patches. As I looked through my book, I spotted a picture of a species called a “red-winged blackbird.” I had identified a bird on my own and accumulated the first of untold memories concerning the “otherness” of living things around me.

I had become a birdwatcher. 

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Frank Graham Jr.

Frank Graham Jr. is a field editor for Audubon.

Type: Author | From: Audubon Magazine

Comments

chickadees and cardinals

the baby carolina chickadees fledged and left their box two days ago. the box was on the back of the house. a pair of cardinals watched the whole proceeding with what appeared to be great interest. within 30 minutes their own babies left their nest in the bushes at the front of the house. I wonder, did watching the chickadees trigger this?H

Red Brested Nuthatch

My first birding trip with NJ Audubon was to the autumn migration weekend in October (now it's called The Bird Show) I was on my way to dinner after a birding program when I spotted a Red Breasted Nuthatch lying on the ground. I assumed it perished from an encounter with the many windows from the surrounding hotels. I stooped down to hold him in my hand to get an up close and intimate look. 2 fellow birders stopped by and asked what I had. I held out my hand and said a Red Breasted Nuthatch, must have collided with a window. The little bird regained consciousness and landed on the one woman's coat walking downwards just as described in Peterson's, then flying off. Not only did I become a member of NJ Audubon, but became a life member along with my husband.

hummingbirds

i would like to post this more as a warning than an anecdote. mostly because i love the hummingbirds so much, and since i moved from a farm to suburbia, feeding them is different. habitat is different, but insects are not. i was warned by an older bird-lover that a praying mantis would take a hummer, given the opportunity. while this was never something i thought i would see, but have now seen it 2 times...DO NOT HANG HUMMER FEEDERS NEAR SHRUBS! I use small tubes so that i have 10 or so hanging and change the nectar every couple of days. one was hanging near clematis another hanging in a small dogwood...in both instances, the praying mantis (rather large ones)had made their way on to the feeder perched, hanging upside down ready to attack! so thankful to have caught them! gave me chills! please take heed! thanks

my most memorable experience

I was in Mammoth Lakes. I had come back to visit after moving down about a year before. I was out at Crowley Lake going water skiing.
I was cruising down this dirt road when I saw this bird sitting on the road straight in front of me. I always liked swifts especially after my freind had told me that he would see them at 14,000 ft while hang gliding.
I stopped the car, got out walked up to the bird, crouched down to look at it and reached my hand out to touch it while it stayed in one spot perfectly still. It sat there and let me touch it and them immediatley flew away as I watched it in awe till it was out of sight.
It was one of the most spiritual and woderful moments I have ever experienced in my life.

Geese

I was 9 or 10, living in Eastern Pennsylvania. It was winter and we had a snow fall that closed the school. I was outside, up to my knees in snow. I heard a "caw" above me. As I looked up I witnessed a pride of geese flying south for the winter. They were flying in a perfect "V" formation. No one out of line. The air filled with their calls. I stood transfixed, watching them cross the bright blue sky. I watched till they disappeared. I watched after they disappeared. I was flying south with them. 50 years later and I can still picture them in my mind. G-d's canvas was extraordinary that day.

Geese

I was 9 or 10, living in Eastern Pennsylvania. It was winter and we had a snow fall that closed the school. I was outside, up to my knees in snow. I heard a "caw" above me. As I looked up I witnessed a pride of geese flying south for the winter. They were flying in a perfect "V" formation. No one out of line. The air filled with their calls. I stood transfixed, watching them cross the bright blue sky. I watched till they disappeared. I watched after they disappeared. I was flying south with them. 50 years later and I can still picture them in my mind. G-d's canvas was extraordinary that day.

memorable Bird Moment

One year there was a robin who was raising three baby robins in my backyard. She had lost her mate earlier and had no one to help her take care of them. I would be sitting on the patio in the evenings and she would bring her brood to the edge of the patio steps where there was an old plow. She left them sitting on the plow handle near where I was sitting, while she flew off to have some time to herself. She'd then come back to them before it got too dark. I was a bird babysitter that summer. It was great fun.

Goose Island Park birds

On a very nice winter morning while viewing the many birds at the park. I thought about putting some chipped sunflower seeds in my hand. No sooner then said, I had a flurry of birds landing on my hand to eat. Having my Nikon Cool-pix along I took pics of Black Capped Chick-a-dees, Tufted Titmouse, Downy Woodpeckers, White breasted Nuthatches and even a Red Breasted Nuthatch that had taken their turns eating out of my hand. The feeling and sound of these birds was awesome. This was up close and personal.

Yellow throated warbler - most memorable bird moments

I purchased five acres of oak and hickory forest in central illinois. Needless to say, this
area contains a lot of woodland birds, especially woodpeckers.
One morning while working on the grounds, I heard this call that I had never heard before -
sounded kind of primitive. Much to my delight - it was the call of the piliated woodpecker -
I walked around and was delighted to see that a pair of them had made my property home.
What magnificent birds - AND so very big. I just love all of the birds, but, the woodland birds
most especially.

Yellow--throated Warbler

Thanks to the photo of the Yellow-throated Warbler in the invitation to this blog, I share the following. Recently I was seated sideways in my car, feet on the ground while reading a book. It was a delightful spring day in mountains of NE Tennessee. Bright sunshine, cool breeze. Suddenly there was a flutter and a bird lit on the edge of my book. It was there for only an instant. Probably as surprised as I was to discover where it was, just 16 inches from my face! I got only a mental snapshot of the bird before it was gone and realized I was sure of its identification. But I got enough key characteristics to sort it out in my field guide later in the day. The one item I missed for proof positive was the white patch on the side of the head. My life list showed no previous record of the YTW so I was eager to confirm the ID. When I returned to the same spot the next day I wasn't that confident I would see it again even with my binoculars in hand. But there it was. Only this time high in the trees overhead. And, sure enough, there was the defining white patch. Yellow-throated Warbler! I guess it would have been a delight to have any bird land on my book, but what a gift to have it be a lifer and such a beautiful one at that.

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