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In Floods and Trickles, Birds Are Flowing South
An average extraordinary walk at the beach

By Robert Winkler
About the Author

n a brisk, sunny afternoon in mid-to-late September, you can gaze with binoculars into billowy clouds and count thousands of broad-winged hawks migrating south. These crow-sized raptors with banded tails soar on currents of sun-heated air in groups known as kettles. A single kettle may contain 200 or more broad-wings, who circle as if a great wand had stirred the sky and caught them in a vortex.

Fall has its subtler migration spectacles. Although blue jays occur year-round in the Northeast, they are migratory. In late September, they withdraw from the northern edge of their breeding range and pass through the trees in small bands, a mode of travel that belies their numbers. Northern flickers are equally common, especially along the coast, where they stream by in loose flocks. Unlike most woodpeckers, flickers spend a lot of time on the ground probing for ants. In flight, they show a white rump and yellow undersides on the wings and tail.

American kestrels, smallest of North America's falcons, migrate at about the same time as the jays and flickers. As they follow the coast, kestrels often hover above marshes and grasslands, waiting to pounce on rodents, small birds and insects. In fall they can be numerous—I have seen 50 in an hour—but on a recent visit to the beach, I saw only three kestrels the entire morning. A jay decided to provoke one of them, a male resting on the tip of a sapling beside a salt marsh.

It was a showdown between two of our handsomest birds: the ornate blue jay, a loud smart aleck, and the dapper American kestrel, a graceful speed demon. Although slightly larger than a male kestrel, the blue jay has inferior weaponry. Sounding its raspy alarm call, the jay flew at the kestrel, who shrugged off the assault. When the jay persisted, the kestrel retaliated with talons bared.

The kestrel drove off the jay, but then a crow flew in and drove off the kestrel. The crow intervened not to protect its fellow corvid—blue jays strongly dislike crows, and the feeling, I am sure, is mutual—but solely because a crow cannot resist the temptation to bully a small raptor. If the kestrel's larger cousin, a peregrine falcon, had come by and launched an attack, the crow would have been lucky to escape with its life.

After witnessing the brawl, I walked on the beach and saw hundreds of tree swallows flying west along the edge of Long Island Sound, a migration no less impressive than that of broad-winged hawks. If I had stayed awhile, I probably would have counted a thousand swallows, but I could not resist forging into a rank growth of shrubs and weeds above the beach.

The plants were going to seed and had attracted a small convention of sparrows: savannahs, songs, swamps, white-throateds and chippings. American goldfinches in their dull-yellow winter plumage outnumbered any single species of sparrow. As I waded through the fading foliage, the goldfinches were always the first birds to flush. Keeping just ahead of me, they moved in undulating flight, calling as they took off. Among them I found a female indigo bunting and a dozen bobolinks, streaked with black and strongly tinged with yellow.

"Snowy Heron or White Egret" by John James Audubon

Ospreys on their southward journeys flew in widely spaced single file above the marsh, some flapping deeply, others soaring gull-like, with wings bowed. In the muddy channels, the numbers of summering great and snowy egrets had waned; most of those remaining were greats. One "off" snowy flying across the marsh caught my eye. It was not quite graceful enough, I thought. When I got my binoculars on it, the stout bill, pale blue at the base, and the greenish-yellow legs gave away an immature little blue heron.

I came to the edge of an inlet and surprised 26 double-crested cormorants, most of them submerged. One by one their snaky heads surfaced, and when all of them were up, the first in line took off, slapping the water with its wingtips and running across the surface before it got airborne. The rest followed, and with labored flight they found refuge in the widest expanse of water.

Two ducks beyond the relocated cormorants were so far away I could not identify them. I thought they were mallards until they dove repeatedly underwater. The very common mallard is a dabbler, a surface-feeding duck that tips into the water, submerging its front half only.

Then I realized that I had not seen any mallards all morning. They could have been on the Sound or hidden in a tidal creek, but at this time of year, and in this ideal habitat, it was a notable miss. It is easy to forget that the absence of an expected bird can have more significance than the appearance of a rarity.

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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.

"Snowy Heron or White Egret" by John James Audubon, a plate in his Birds of America (1827-38)
Text Copyright © 2000 Robert Winkler


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