The foregoing chapters contain a recital
of observations made in the neighborhood of Colorado
Springs and in trips on the plains and among the mountains
in that latitude. Two years later that
is, in 1901 the rambler’s good angel
again smiled upon him and made possible another tour
among the Colorado mountains. This time he made
Denver, instead of Colorado Springs, the centre of
operations; nor did he go alone, his companion being
an active boy of fourteen who has a penchant for Butterflies,
while that of the writer, as need scarcely be said,
is for the Birds in our estimation, the
two cardinal B’s of the English language.
Imagine two inveterate ramblers, then, with two such
enchanting hobbies, set loose on the Colorado plains
and in the mountains, with the prospect of a month
of uninterrupted indulgence in their manías!
In the account of my first visit,
most of the species met with were described in detail
both as to their habits and personal appearance.
In the present record no such minutiae will be necessary
so far as the same species were observed, and therefore
the chief objects of the following chapters will be,
first, to note the diversities in the avian fauna of
the two regions; second, to give special attention
to such birds as either were not seen in my first
visit or were for some cause partly overlooked; and,
third, to trace the peculiar transitions in bird life
in passing from the plains about Denver to the crest
of Gray’s Peak, including jaunts to several
other localities.
In my rambles in the neighborhood
of Denver only a few species not previously described
were observed, and yet there were some noteworthy
points of difference in the avi-fauna of the two
latitudes, which are only about seventy-five miles
apart. It will perhaps be remembered that, in
the vicinity of Colorado Springs and Manitou, the pretty
lazuli buntings were quite rare and exceedingly shy,
only two or three individuals having been seen.
The reverse was the case in the suburbs of Denver
and on the irrigated plains between that city and the
mountains, and also in the neighborhood of Boulder,
where in all suitable haunts the lazulis were constantly
at my elbow, lavish enough of their pert little melodies
to satisfy the most exacting, and almost as familiar
and approachable as the indigo-birds of the East.
It is possible that, for the most part, the blue-coated
beauties prefer a more northern latitude than Colorado
Springs for the breeding season.
At the latter place I failed to find
the burrowing owl, although there can be little doubt
of his presence there, especially out on the plains.
Not far from Denver one of these uncanny, sepulchral
birds was seen, having been frightened from her tunnel
as I came stalking near it. She flew over the
brow of the hill in her smooth, silent way, and uttered
no syllable of protest as I examined her domicile or,
rather, the outside of it. Scattered about the
dark doorway were a number of bones, feathers, and
the skin of a frog, telling the story of the table
d’hote set by this underground dweller before
her nestlings. She might have put up the crossbones
and skull as a sign at the entrance to her burrow,
or even placed there the well-known Dantean legend,
“All hope abandon, ye who enter here,”
neither of which would have been more suggestive than
the telltale litter piled up before her door.
When I chased her from her hiding-place, she flew
down the hill and alighted on a fence-post in the
neighborhood of her nest, uttering several screechy
notes as I came near her again, as if she meant to
say that I was carrying the joke a little too far
in pursuing her about. Presently she circled
away on oily wings, and I saw her no more.
So little enthusiasm does such a bird
stir within me that I felt too lazy to follow her
about on the arid plain. It may be interesting
as a matter of scientific information to know that
the burrowing owl breeds in a hole in the ground,
and keeps company with the prairie dog and the rattlesnake,
but a bird that lives in a gloomy, malodorous cave,
whose manners are far from attractive, and whose voice
sounds as strident as a buzz-saw surely
such a bird can cast no spell upon the observer who
is interested in the aesthetic side of bird nature.
A recent writer, in describing “A Buzzards’
Banquet,” asks a couple of pregnant questions:
“Is there anything ugly out of doors? Can
the ardent, sympathetic lover of nature ever find
her unlovely?” To the present writer these questions
present no Chinese puzzle. He simply brushes all
speculation and theorizing aside by responding “Yes,”
to both interrogatories, on the principle that it
is sometimes just as well to cut the Gordian knot as
to waste precious time trying to untie it. The
burrowing owl makes me think of a denizen of the other
side of the river Styx, and why should one try to
love that which nature has made unattractive, especially
when one cannot help one’s feeling?
In the preceding chronicles no mention,
I believe, has been made of one little bird that deserves
more than a mere obiter dictum. My first
meeting with the blithesome house-finch of the West
occurred in the city of Denver, in 1899. It could
not properly be called a formal presentment, but was
none the less welcome on that account. I had
scarcely stepped out upon the busy street before my
ear was accosted by a kind of half twitter and half
song that was new to me. “Surely that is
not the racket of the English sparrow; it is too musical,”
I remarked to a friend walking by my side.
Peering among the trees and houses,
I presently focussed my field-glass upon a small,
finch-like bird whose coat was striped with gray and
brown, and whose face, crown, breast, and rump were
beautifully tinged or washed with crimson, giving
him quite a dressy appearance. What could this
chipper little city chap be, with his trig form and
well-bred manners, in such marked contrast with those
of the swaggering English sparrow? Afterwards
he was identified as the house-finch, which rejoices
in the high-sounding Latin name of Carpodacus mexicanus
frontalis. His distribution is restricted
to the Rocky Mountain district chiefly south of the
fortieth parallel of north latitude.
He is certainly an attractive species,
and I wish we could offer sufficient inducements to
bring him east. A bird like him is a boon and
an ornament to the streets and parks of any city that
he graces with his presence and enlivens with his
songs. No selfish recluse is he; no, indeed!
In no dark gulch or wilderness, far from human neighborhood,
does he sulkily take up his abode, but prefers the
companionship of man to the solitudes of nature, declaring
in all his conduct that he likes to be where there
are “folks.” In this respect he bears
likeness to the English sparrow; but let it be remembered
that there the analogy stops. Even his chirruping
is musical as he flies overhead, or makes his caveat
from a tree or a telegraph wire against your ill-bred
espionage. He and his plainly clad little spouse
build a neat cottage for their bairns about the houses,
but do not clog the spouting and make themselves a
nuisance otherwise, as is the habit of their English
cousins.
This finch is a minstrel, not of the
first class, still one that merits a high place among
the minor songsters; and, withal, he is generous with
his music. You might call him a kind of urban
Arion, for there is real melody in his little score.
As he is an early riser, his matin voluntaries
often mingled with my half-waking dreams in the morning
at dawn’s peeping, and I loved to hear it too
well to be angry for being aroused at an unseasonable
hour. The song is quite a complicated performance
at its best, considerably prolonged and varied, running
up and down the chromatic scale with a swing and gallop,
and delivered with great rapidity, as if the lyrist
were in a hurry to have done, so that he could get
at something else.
In my rambles he was found not only
in the cities of the plains (Denver, Colorado Springs,
and Pueblo), but also in many of the mountain towns
and villages visited, Leadville, over ten thousand
feet skyward, being, I believe, one of the exceptions,
while Silver Plume and Graymont were others.
He does not fancy altitudes, I take it, much over eight
thousand feet. In the villages of Red Cliff and
Glenwood, both beyond the continental divide, he was
the same sprightly citizen, making himself very much
at home.
Much as this finch cherishes the society
of man, he is quite wary and suspicious, and does
not fancy being watched. As long as you go on
your way without seeming to notice him, he also goes
his way, coming into plain sight and chirping and
singing; but just stop to watch him with your binocular,
and see how quickly he will take alarm, dart away,
and ensconce himself behind a clump of foliage, uttering
a protest which seems to say, “Why doesn’t
that old fellow go about his own business?”
If in some way the American house-finch could be persuaded
to come east, and the English sparrow could be given
papers of extradition, the exchange would be a relief
and a benefit to the whole country.
Some idyllic days were spent in sauntering
about Golden, which keeps guard at the entrance of
Clear Creek Canyon, and has tucked itself in a beautiful
valley among the foothills, which in turn stand sentinel
over it. In the village itself and along the
bush-fringed border of the creek below, as well as
in the little park at its border, there were many
birds, nearly all of which have been described in the
previous chapters. However, several exceptions
are worthy of note. A matted copse a mile and
a half below the town afforded a hiding-place for three
young or female redstarts, which were “playing
butterfly,” as usual, and chanting their vivacious
little tunes. These and several near Boulder were
the only redstarts seen in my Colorado wanderings,
although Professor Cooke says they breed sparingly
on the plains, and a little more commonly in the mountains
to an altitude of eight thousand feet, while one observer
saw a female in July at the timber-line, which is three
thousand feet above the normal range of the species.
Why did not this birdlet remain within the bounds
set by the scientific guild? Suit for contempt
of court should be brought against it. Redstarts
must have been very scarce in the regions over which
I rambled, else I certainly should have noticed birds
that are so fearless and so lavish of song.
One day my companion and I clambered
up the steep side of a mesa some distance below Golden that
is, the base of the mesa was below the village, while
its top towered far above it. A mesa was a structural
portion of Colorado topography that neither of the
two ramblers had yet explored, and we were anxious
to know something about its resources from a natural
history point of view. It was hard climbing on
account of the steepness of the acclivity, its rocky
character, and the thick network of bushes and brambles
in many places; but “excelsior” was our
motto in all our mountaineering, and we allowed no
surmountable difficulties to daunt us. What birds
select such steep places for a habitat? Here lived
in happy domesticity the lyrical green-tailed towhee,
the bird of the liquid voice, the poet laureate of
the steep, bushy mountain sides, just as the water-ousel
is the poet of the cascades far down in the canyons
and gulches; here also thrived the spurred towhees,
one of which had tucked a nest beneath a bush cradling
three speckled eggs. This was the second nest
of this species I had found, albeit not the last.
Here also dwelt the rock wren, a little bird that
was new to me and that I had not found in the latitude
of Colorado Springs either east or west of the continental
divide. A description of this anchorite of the
rocks will be given in a later chapter. I simply
pause here to remark that he has a sort of “monarch-of-all-I-survey”
air as he sits on a tall sandstone rock and blows
the music from his Huon’s horn on the messenger
breezes. His wild melodies, often sounding like
a blast from a bugle, are in perfect concord with
the wild and rugged acclivities which he haunts, from
which he can command many a prospect that pleases,
whether he glances down into the valleys or up to
the silver-capped mountain peaks. One cannot
help feeling at least, after one has left
his rock-strewn dwelling-place that a kind
of glamour hangs about it and him.
The loud hurly-burly of the long-tailed
chat reached us from a bushy hollow not far away.
So far as I could determine, this fellow is as garrulous
a churl and bully as his yellow-breasted cousin so
well known in the East. (Afterwards I found the chats
quite numerous at Boulder.) At length we scaled the
cliffs, and presently stood on the edge of the mesa,
which we found to be a somewhat rolling plateau, looking
much like the plains themselves in general features,
with here and there a hint of verdure, on which a
herd of cattle were grazing. The pasture was the
buffalo grass. Does the bird-lover ask what species
dwell on a treeless mesa like this? It was the
home of western grassfinches, western meadow-larks,
turtle doves, desert horned larks, and a little bird
that was new to me, evidently Brewer’s sparrow.
Its favorite resort was in the low bushes growing
on the border of the mesa and along the edge of the
cliff. Its song was unique, the opening syllable
running low on the alto clef, while the closing notes
constituted a very respectable soprano. A few
extremely shy sparrows flitted about in the thickets
of a hollow as we began our descent, and I have no
doubt they were Lincoln’s sparrows.
The valley and the irrigated plain
were the birds’ elysium. Here we first
saw and heard that captivating bird, the lark bunting,
as will be fully set forth in the closing chapter.
This was one of the birds that had escaped me in my
first visit to Colorado, save as I had caught tantalizing
glimpses of him from the car-window on the plain beyond
Denver, and when I went south to Colorado Springs,
I utterly failed to find him. It has been a sort
of riddle to me that not one could be discovered in
that vicinity, while two years later these birds were
abundant on the plains both east and west of Denver.
If Colorado Springs is a little too far south for
them in the summer, Denver is obviously just to their
liking. No less abundant were the western meadow-larks,
which flew and sang with a kind of lyrical intoxication
over the green alfalfa fields.
One morning we decided to walk some
distance up Clear Creek Canyon. At the opening
of the canyon, Brewer’s blackbirds were scuttling
about in the bushes that broidered the steep banks
of the tumultuous stream, and a short distance up
in the gorge a lazuli bunting sat on a telegraph wire
and piped his merry lay. Soon the canyon narrowed,
grew dark and forbidding, and the steep walls rose
high on both sides, compelling the railway to creep
like a half-imprisoned serpent along the foot of the
cliffs; then the birds disappeared, not caring to dwell
in such dark, more than half-immured places.
Occasionally a magpie could be seen sailing overhead
at an immense height, crossing over from one hillside
to the other, turning his head as he made the transit,
to get a view of the two peripatetics in the gulch
below, anxious to discover whether they were bent
on brigandage of any kind.
At length we reached a point where
the mountain side did not look so steep as elsewhere,
and we decided to scale it. From the railway it
looked like a short climb, even if a little difficult,
and we began it with only a slight idea of the magnitude
of our undertaking. The fact is, mountain climbing
is a good deal more than pastime; it amounts to work,
downright hard work. In the present instance,
no sooner had we gained one height than another loomed
steep and challenging above us, so that we climbed
the mountain by a series of immense steps or terraces.
At places the acclivity was so steep that we were compelled
to scramble over the rocks on all fours, and were
glad to stop frequently and draw breath and rest our
tired limbs. My boy comrade, having fewer things
than I to lure him by the way, and being, perhaps,
a little more agile as well, went far on ahead of
me, often standing on a dizzy pinnacle of rock, and
waving his butterfly-net or his cap in the air, and
shouting at the top of his voice to encourage his
lagging parent and announce his triumph as a mountaineer.
However, the birdman can never forget
his hobby. There were a few birds on that precipitous
mountain side, and that lent it its chief attraction.
At one place a spurred towhee flitted about in a bushy
clump and called much like a catbird an
almost certain proof of a nest on the steep, rocky
wall far up from the roaring torrent in the gorge below.
On a stony ridge still farther up, a rock wren was
ringing his peculiar score, which sounds so much like
a challenge, while still farther up, in a cluster
of stunted pines, a long-crested jay lilted about and
called petulantly, until I came near, when he swung
across the canyon, and I saw him no more.
After a couple of hours of hard climbing,
we reached the summit, from which we were afforded
a magnificent view of the foothills, the mesas,
and the stretching plains below us, while above us
to the west hills rose on hills until they culminated
in mighty snow-capped peaks and ridges. It must
not be supposed, because the snow-mantled summits in
the west loomed far above our present station, that
this mountain which we had ascended was a comparatively
insignificant affair. The fact is, it was of
huge bulk and great height measured from its base in
the canyon; almost as much of a mountain, in itself
considered, as Gray’s Peak. It must be
borne in mind that the snowy peaks were from thirty
to forty miles away, and that there is a gradual ascent
the entire distance to the upper valleys and gorges
which creep about the bases of the loftiest peaks
and ridges. A mountain rising from the foothills
may be almost as bulky and high and precipitous as
one of the alpine peaks covered with eternal snow.
Its actual altitude above sea-level may be less by
many thousand feet, while its height from the surrounding
canyons and valleys may be almost, if not quite, as
great. The alpine peaks have the advantage of
majesty of situation, because the general level of
the country from which they rise is very high.
There we stood at a sort of outdoor halfway house
between the plains and the towering ridges, and I
can only say that the view was superb.
There were certain kinds of birds
which had brought their household gods to the mountain’s
crest. Lewis’s woodpeckers ambled about
over the summit and rocky ridges, catching insects
on the wing, as is their wont. Some distance
below the summit a pair of them had a nest in a dead
pine snag, from the orifice of which one was seen
to issue. A mother hawk was feeding a couple
of youngsters on the snarly branch of a dead pine.
Almost on the summit a western nighthawk sprang up
from my feet. On the bare ground, without the
faintest sign of a nest, lay her two speckled eggs,
which she had been brooding. She swept around
above the summit in immense zigzag spirals while I
examined her roofless dwelling-place. It was
interesting to one bird-lover, at least, to know that
the nighthawk breeds in such places. Like their
eastern congeners, the western nighthawks are fond
of “booming.” At intervals a magpie
would swing across the canyon, looking from side to
side, the impersonation of cautious shyness.
A few rods below the crest a couple of rock wrens were
flitting about some large rocks, creeping in and out
among the crevices like gray mice, and at length one
of them slyly fed a well-fledged youngster. This
proves that these birds, like many of their congeners,
are partial to a commanding lookout for a nesting site.
These were the only occupants of the mountain’s
brow at the time of our visit, although in one of
the hollows below us the spurred and green-tailed towhees
were rendering a selection from Haydn’s “Creation,”
probably “The heavens are telling.”
No water was to be found from the
bottom of the canyon to the summit of the mountain;
all was as dry as the plain itself. The feathered
tenants of the dizzy height were doubtless compelled
to fly down into the gorge for drinking and bathing
purposes, and then wing up again to the summit certainly
no light task for such birds as the wrens and towhees.
Before daybreak one morning I made my way to a small park on the outskirts of
the village to listen to the birds matutinal concert. The earliest
singers were the western robins, which began their carols at the first hint of
the coming dawn; the next to break the silence were the western wood-pewees;
then the summer warblers chimed in, followed by the western grassfinches,
Bullocks orioles, meadow-larks, and lark sparrows, in the order named.
Before daylight had fully come a family of mountain bluebirds were taking their
breakfast at the border of the park, while their human relatives were still
snoring in bed. The bluebirds are governed by old-fashioned rules even in
this very modern age, among their maxims being,
“Early to bed and early
to rise,
Makes bluebirds healthy and
wealthy and wise.”
Just now I came across a pretty conceit
of John B. Tabb, which more aptly sets off the mountain
blue than it does his eastern relative, and which
I cannot forbear quoting:
“When God made a host
of them,
One little flower lacked a
stem
To hold its blossom
blue;
So into it He breathed a song,
And suddenly, with petals
strong
As wings, away
it flew.”
And there is Eben E. Rexford, who
almost loses himself in a tangle of metaphors in his
efforts to express his admiration of this bird with
the cerulean plumes. Hark to his rhapsody:
“Winged lute that we
call a bluebird, you blend in a silver strain
The sound of the laughing
waters, the patter of spring’s sweet rain,
The voice of the winds, the
sunshine, and fragrance of blossoming
things;
Ah! you are an April poem
that God has dowered with wings.”
On our return to the plains from a
two weeks’ trip to Georgetown and Gray’s
Peak, we spent several days at Arvada, a village about
halfway between Denver and Golden. The place
was rife with birds, all of which are described in
other chapters of this volume. Mention need be
made here only of the song-sparrows, which were seen
in a bushy place through which a purling stream wound
its way. Of course, they were Melospiza fasciata
montana, but their clear, bell-like trills were
precise copies of those of the merry lowland minstrels
of the East. Special attention is called to the
fact that, in my first visit to Colorado, the only
place in which mountain song-sparrows were met with
was Buena Vista, quite a distance up among the mountains,
while in the visit now being described they were not
found anywhere in the mountains, save in the vale
below Cassels. They were breeding at Arvada, for
a female was seen carrying a worm in her bill, and
I am sure a nest might easily have been found had
I not been so busily occupied in the study of other
and rarer species. However, the recollection
of the merry lyrists with the speckled breasts and
silvery voices, brings to mind Mr. Ernest Thompson
Seton’s “Myth of the Song-Sparrow,”
from which it will be seen that this attractive bird
has had something of an adventurous career:
“His mother was the
Brook, his sisters were the Reeds,
And they every one applauded
when he sang about his deeds.
His vest was white, his mantle
brown, as clear as they could be,
And his songs were fairly
bubbling o’er with melody and glee.
But an envious Neighbor splashed
with mud our Brownie’s coat and vest,
And then a final handful threw
that stuck upon his breast.
The Brook-bird’s mother
did her best to wash the stains away,
But there they stuck, and,
as it seems, are very like to stay.
And so he wears the splashes
and the mud blotch, as you see;
But his songs are bubbling
over still with melody and glee.”