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Sitting Big
Stopping by water to watch the world spin

By Robert Winkler
About the Author

n a bird count I become a hound, sniffing out birds while always on the move. I first heard about a sedentary count from a birder I met at Hammonasset Beach State Park in Madison, Conn. He and a few companions had tallied some 60 species birding all day at a single spot. It was a new event called a Big Sit, conjured up by a member of the New Haven Bird Club. I dismissed such enfeebled birding as unworthy of my participation.

By the time I was invited to join other birders at Sherwood Island State Park for the third annual Big Sit, my opinion had changed. During the summer, I had taken my reading to Burying Hill Beach in Westport. I passed many hours on a sandy crescent across the inlet from Sherwood Island, not reading much. Most of the time, I watched summer rhythms: shorebirds following the tide, lifeguards twirling their whistles, umbrella fringes and common terns flapping in the breeze.

From my bed of sand on those late-summer days, I saw things I had missed in miles of walking. A short-billed dowitcher shot along the inlet—I heard its subdued triple toot—the only dowitcher I saw all season. Least sandpipers landed at my bare feet. Fifty semipalmated plovers settled beside the Sherwood Island jetty and became invisible among the rocks. Children exploring the tidepools didn't notice the plovers, or the probing ruddy turnstone, or the teetering spotted sandpiper.

The carousel of life keeps turning, in time showing sides you might never see while moving with it. You need not always go to the birds. If you are patient, nature's ultimate travelers will come to you—the inspiration for the Big Sit.

The Big Sit is like a hawk watch because you stay in one place: a strategically located 17-foot-diameter circle. It is like a Big Day because you count all species, not only hawks. Members of your team are supposed to stay in the circle from dawn to dusk on the third or fourth Sunday in October, and you compete with other teams for the highest species total. You can leave the circle to get a closer look at a bird you are unable to identify, but you cannot count other birds while outside the circle.

Scouting Sherwood Island the day before the event, I could not imagine approaching the 70 species found a year earlier by big sitters at Milford Point. In three hours I had only 53 species, and that was while moving through the park in my usual doglike way.

"Salt Marsh at Southport, Connecticut" by Martin Johnson Heade

The next morning I arrived before my two Big Sit partners and picked our spot: the picnic area behind West Beach. I had seen a sharp-shinned hawk and a kestrel there the previous day, and we would have a view of most of Sherwood Island's habitats: Long Island Sound and the beach in front, the marsh and the Mill Pond in back, woods on the left, and dry brush on the right. It was also a very pleasant place to be, this grassy carpet dotted with oak saplings and picnic tables.

A west wind blew stiff and steady all morning, and I never really warmed up. Under low and swiftly moving clouds, the choppy Sound was slate gray, a good background for spotting waterfowl, but all we had were mallards and black ducks, plus the usual gulls.

The land birds at times swirled around us, but generally they trickled through, crossing east to west over the open area where we stood. In the saplings, myrtle warblers and a few palm warblers were our constant companions, and tufted titmice streamed by. Most of the park's common birds passed our checkpoint; if we did not see them, we heard their distinctive calls.

Unusual species were an American oystercatcher flying way out above the Sound, the fall's first red-throated loon, and a formation of 40 snow geese against the clouds. A peregrine falcon flew directly over us at 7:30 A.M.—we expected one but not so quickly.

We waited hours for several common birds—blue jay, flicker, and fish crow—but missed red-winged blackbird and robin. We were lucky to get a meadowlark and a common snipe, which usually stay on the east side of the park. Our only sparrows were songs and savannahs. More sparrows undoubtedly skulked in the weeds about 200 yards to our right, but we decided it would be cheating to send someone over to flush them into view.

"Fish Hawk" by John James Audubon Our scopes pulled in a lone greater yellowlegs on the Mill Pond, and we had fair success with raptors: 20 ospreys, 5 harriers, 10 sharp-shinneds, 3 Cooper's, 2 red-tails, 5 kestrels, and the peregrine. Two of the harriers were flying west just above the Sound, migrating over open water, I suppose, to avoid harassment by crows. A Cooper's hawk forced down a couple of black ducks crossing the marsh, but then passed over them—a practice attack maneuver.

To see what other birds were possible that day, we took a mid-morning foray into the rest of the park and found nine more birds, common species that had evaded our circle's radar. Of course, we could not include them in our official total.

We stopped after six hours at 12:30 P.M., with 55 species seen or heard from our beachside roost, two more than I had the day before on my customary rounds. Perhaps we could have broken 60 if we stayed all day, but we had no hope of surpassing Milford Point's 70 species, the Connecticut record at the time.

Although we fell short of the Big Sit champs, I never would have guessed that we could stay put and see 55 species at Sherwood Island in mid-October. I expected 30, 40 birds at most, but then again, I am a novice at sitting still outdoors. Rarely do I come to a dead halt for hours. I pause to rest, admire a view, have a drink or sandwich—but in minutes I am on my feet.

I like to walk when I go birding, but this is only one way to experience infinitely dynamic nature. When I meet a fisherman on one of my waterside rambles, he may mention birds I have not seen. He hardly moves and sees a different world—nature's law of relativity. In the wild you can journey without using your feet.

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A message from Robert Winkler
RW
Jeff Brush/Connecticut Post (used with permission)

If you enjoyed this essay, I know you'll enjoy my critically acclaimed book, Going Wild: Adventures with Birds in the Suburban Wilderness (National Geographic), which expands on many of the short pieces I've posted here. Why do I write about birds? Because they represent the wild in all its glory. They're numerous, diverse, intelligent, talkative, and beautiful; their power of flight never ceases to amaze; and they're the most conspicuous class of wild animal—even in the suburb, they're just about everywhere. Whether you're a beginning or advanced birder, a fan of nature writing, a curious suburbanite, or a reader in search of that rare bird known as a good book, Going Wild could very well change how you view your world. So get your copy now, or buy one for your favorite birder or nature lover. Best deal on the Web: brand new, perfect copies $5 each (69% off) at National Geographic Books.

"Salt Marsh at Southport, Connecticut" by Martin Johnson Heade (c. 1878; oil on canvas)
"Fish Hawk" by John James Audubon, a plate in his Birds of America (1827-38)
Text Copyright © 2000 Robert Winkler


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