The homing instinct in birds and animals
is one of their most remarkable traits: their
strong local attachments and their skill in finding
their way back when removed to a distance. It
seems at times as if they possessed some extra sense the
home sense which operates unerringly.
I saw this illustrated one spring in the case of a
mallard drake.
My son had two ducks, and to mate
with them he procured a drake of a neighbor who lived
two miles south of us. He brought the drake home
in a bag. The bird had no opportunity to see
the road along which it was carried, or to get the
general direction, except at the time of starting,
when the boy carried him a few rods openly.
He was placed with the ducks in a
spring run, under a tree in a secluded place on the
river slope, about a hundred yards from the highway.
The two ducks treated him very contemptuously.
It was easy to see that the drake was homesick from
the first hour, and he soon left the presence of the
scornful ducks.
Then we shut the three in the barn
together, and kept them there a day and a night.
Still the friendship did not ripen; the ducks and the
drake separated the moment we let them out. Left
to himself, the drake at once turned his head homeward,
and started up the hill for the highway.
Then we shut the trio up together
again for a couple of days, but with the same results
as before. There seemed to be but one thought
in the mind of the drake, and that was home.
Several times we headed him off and
brought him back, till finally on the third or fourth
day I said to my son, “If that drake is really
bound to go home, he shall have an opportunity to make
the trial, and I will go with him to see that he has
fair play.” We withdrew, and the homesick
mallard started up through the currant patch, then
through the vineyard toward the highway which he had
never seen.
When he reached the fence, he followed
it south till he came to the open gate, where he took
to the road as confidently as if he knew for a certainty
that it would lead him straight to his mate. How
eagerly he paddled along, glancing right and left,
and increasing his speed at every step! I kept
about fifty yards behind him. Presently he met
a dog; he paused and eyed the animal for a moment,
and then turned to the right along a road which diverged
just at that point, and which led to the railroad
station. I followed, thinking the drake would
soon lose his bearings, and get hopelessly confused
in the tangle of roads that converged at the station.
But he seemed to have an exact map
of the country in his mind; he soon left the station
road, went around a house, through a vineyard, till
he struck a stone fence that crossed his course at
right angles; this he followed eastward till it was
joined by a barbed wire fence, under which he passed
and again entered the highway he had first taken.
Then down the road he paddled with renewed confidence:
under the trees, down a hill, through a grove, over
a bridge, up the hill again toward home.
Presently he found his clue cut in
two by the railroad track; this was something he had
never before seen; he paused, glanced up it, then
down it, then at the highway across it, and quickly
concluded this last was his course. On he went
again, faster and faster.
He had now gone half the distance,
and was getting tired. A little pool of water
by the roadside caught his eye. Into it he plunged,
bathed, drank, preened his plumage for a few moments,
and then started homeward again. He knew his
home was on the upper side of the road, for he kept
his eye bent in that direction, scanning the fields.
Twice he stopped, stretched himself up, and scanned
the landscape intently; then on again. It seemed
as if an invisible cord was attached to him, and he
was being pulled down the road.
Just opposite a farm lane which led
up to a group of farm buildings, and which did indeed
look like his home lane, he paused and seemed to be
debating with himself. Two women just then came
along; they lifted and flirted their skirts, for it
was raining, and this disturbed him again and decided
him to take to the farm lane. Up the lane he went,
rather doubtingly, I thought.
In a few moments it brought him into
a barn-yard, where a group of hens caught his eye.
Evidently he was on good terms with hens at home, for
he made up to these eagerly as if to tell them his
troubles; but the hens knew not ducks; they withdrew
suspiciously, then assumed a threatening attitude,
till one old “dominic” put up her feathers
and charged upon him viciously.
Again he tried to make up to them,
quacking softly, and again he was repulsed. Then
the cattle in the yard spied this strange creature
and came sniffing toward it, full of curiosity.
The drake quickly concluded he had
got into the wrong place, and turned his face southward
again. Through the fence he went into a plowed
field. Presently another stone fence crossed his
path; along this he again turned toward the highway.
In a few minutes he found himself in a corner formed
by the meeting of two stone fences. Then he turned
appealingly to me, uttering the soft note of the mallard.
To use his wings never seemed to cross his mind.
Well, I am bound to confess that I
helped the drake over the wall, but I sat him down
in the road as impartially as I could. How well
his pink feet knew the course! How they flew
up the road! His green head and white throat
fairly twinkled under the long avenue of oaks and
chestnuts.
At last we came in sight of the home
lane, which led up to the farmhouse one hundred or
more yards from the road. I was curious to see
if he would recognize the place. At the gate leading
into the lane he paused. He had just gone up
a lane that looked like that and had been disappointed.
What should he do now? Truth compels me to say
that he overshot the mark: he kept on hesitatingly
along the highway.
It was now nearly night. I felt
sure the duck would soon discover his mistake, but
I had not time to watch the experiment further.
I went around the drake and turned him back.
As he neared the lane this time he seemed suddenly
to see some familiar landmark, and he rushed up it
at the top of his speed. His joy and eagerness
were almost pathetic.
I followed close. Into the house
yard he rushed with uplifted wings, and fell down
almost exhausted by the side of his mate. A half
hour later the two were nipping the grass together
in the pasture, and he, I have no doubt, was eagerly
telling her the story of his adventures.