kingbird days

May 25, 2002

Today's Photos:

Wild Turkey

Lady's Slipper

White Flower (Uh, I think Starflower)

Other White Flower (some species of Clintonia - guess I'll have to check back in the fall to see what color the berries are)

Today's Reading:
None

This Year's Reading:
2002 Book List

Today's Bird Sightings:
Nagog Park:
Baltimore oriole (2)
American crow (1)
American goldfinch (2)
American robin (2)
northern flicker (1)
common grackle (2)
redwinged blackbird
eastern phoebe

Plum Island:
eastern kingbird (4)
willet (2)
brown headed cowbird (1)
bobolink (4+)
yellow warbler (5)
Canada goose (16)
mallard (2)
redwinged blackbird (2)
common grackle (1)
wild turkey (1)
osprey (1)
herring gull
snowy egret (2)
northern cardinal (1)
northern mockingbird (2)
American goldfinch (2)
gray catbird (4)
American crow (2)
eastern phoebe (1)
yellow-rumped warbler (1)
American robin (2)
magnolia warbler (2)
American redstart (1)
common yellowthroat (1)
double-crested cormorant (6)
mourning dove (1)

This Year's Bird Sightings:
Plum Island Bird List

Today's Starting Pitcher:
Derek Lowe - whose sinker wasn't sinking against the pinstriped ones, alas.



No, this isn't a kingbird. Yes, the turkey is still hanging around near the Pines Trail. So anyway, I saw the first eastern kingbird of the summer a couple of days ago when I pulled into the parking lot at work. I got out of the car exclaiming "eastern kingbird" to no one in particular.

The office park where Starship Startup is has more bird life than I first suspected. I mean besides the huge flock of crows that hangs out at the enormous dirt pile up the hill from us that was evidently going to be yet another office building before the economy went bust, and besides the hordes of herring gulls that periodically desert Nagog Lake for that same dirt pile. Redwinged blackbirds nest there, so do goldfinches, and apparently so do Baltimore orioles (the bird kind, not the baseball kind.)

This morning I went in to the office for to run a quick test on something (I later discovered the thing was unavailable to test (sufficiently vague and mysterious for you?)) and arrived to an empty parking lot and an intense bird drama. A male oriole was harassing the heck out of a crow. Usually blackbirds and orioles gang up on crows, but this guy was all alone. And boy was he fierce. He dived and pecked at that crow until he drove it to the ground. The crow got up again and tried to get away, having lost all interest in whatever it was that provoked the oriole in the first place, and the oriole chased it into the woods. The redwinged blackbirds never even budged.

Since my attempt to get a little ahead of the deadline at the starship was foiled, I zipped over to Concord (rude bridge, shot heard 'round world, transcendentalists, and so on) to Concord Bookshop because I remembered noticing they had reprint editions of some of the Arthur Ransome books. Andrea has requested the six she hasn't read yet for her birthday. I gave her Winter Holiday for Christmas and she developed a taste for the Swallows and Amazons series. La Madre couldn't find them at New England Mobile Book Fair. Anyway, I remembered seeing them on my last visit to Concord, when I bought the Jane Langton books, so I figured I had a chance of scoring at least some of the ones she wants. Bingo, they've got 4 of the 6 she wants! Hooray! Hero aunt handles another book emergency!

With books in hand, I headed back north and east, first to the cat shelter where kitten season is in full swing (please spay/neuter your pet), and then to the refuge to look for birds. And birds there were, kingbirds all over the place, bobolinks, willets, catbirds, and more kingbirds. Somehow I thought that kingbird I saw the other day was early because I associate kingbirds with June and it is still (just barely) May. I am reminded of Thoreau's observation:

"Are these not kingbird days, - these clearer first June days, full of light, when this aerial, twittering bird flutters from willow to willow, and swings on the twigs, showing his white-edged tail?" -- Henry David Thoreau, June 2, 1854

Kingbird days indeed. But they aren't early. I checked my notebook from last year and discovered I spotted my first eastern kingbird on May 9. The year before it was May 7. However, Thoreau is right that they are way more showy in June.

The refuge road was lined with out of town birders (you can tell by the NY, NJ, and Connecticut license plates) and their scopes looking for the latest reported rarity. Who needs a rarity, though? These are kingbird days!

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Copyright © 2002, Janet I. Egan