The Early Bird
The early bird, it is said, gets the worm. I know some birds who seem to disagree.
In a recent Embers post I wrote about the early return
of redwing blackbirds. Although they
surprised me by a few days, every year they reappear in the midst of the tug of
war between winter and spring. Sandhill
cranes are usually next. My wife and I
were pretty sure we heard one call as we arrived home just the day after the
first redwing sighting, but it was only a short, single sound and we were
unconvinced. But the day after that we
definitely heard some cranes calling in the evening behind the house. The next morning, way too early the next morning, two flew right over the
house trumpeting loudly back and forth just before sunrise, and they awakened us due to the decibel
impact of cranes on desires for sleeping in.
After these early birds broke the ice, so to speak,
first sightings of other migrating birds returning to the area seem to be
almost a daily event. Already robins,
grackles, kill deer, and sparrow hawks have also been sighted. All of them seem quite anxious to get back up
north to set up housekeeping. As the longer-term
weather forecast this week calls for daytime highs in the upper 40’s and 50’s,
no doubt more and more of the songbirds will be arriving shortly.
That’s why it seems odd that the juncos, at least the
ones in my yard, so far have refused to return further north to their usual summer
habitat. Instead, they are still the
most common customers of the backyard feeders.
They showed up in early November from the spruce forests of Canada it seemed
literally the day after the last of our “summer birds” all moved south for the
winter. The juncos seem to be in no
particular hurry to migrate. I think
that those little dark gray tufts of feathers are quite aware that when you are
talking about heading north from here at this time of year, the early bird may
find snow still deep and ice still thick.
Instead of “the worm” the bird that is too early way up north is much
more likely to get cold and hungry. And
so, they stay on – seeming quite content to share the feeders with more and
more competition. Juncos demonstrate
that even in the avian world, patience can still be a virtue.
His Peace <><
Deacon Dan
Photo by Sean Foster on Unsplash
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