The high-hole flashing his
golden wings.
WALT WHITMAN.
One of the special objects of my search
during a certain June among the hills of northern
New York was a nest of the golden-winged woodpecker;
not that it is rare or hard to find, but because I
had never seen one and had read attractive stories
of the bird’s domestic relations, the large
number of young in the nest, and his devotion and pride.
Moreover, I had become greatly interested in the whole
family, through my attachment to an individual member
of it in my own house.
I soon discovered that the orchard
at the back of the house was visited every day by
a pair of the birds I was seeking. One was seen
running up and down a trunk of a large poplar-tree,
and the next morning two alighted on a dead branch
at the top of an apple-tree, perching like other birds
on twigs, which seemed too light to bear their weight.
But they were apparently satisfied with them; for
they stayed some time, pluming themselves and evidently
looking with interest and astonishment at human intruders
into what had no doubt been a favorite haunt of their
own. I watched them for several minutes, till
a sudden noise startled the shy creatures and they
were off in an instant.
After that I saw them often at the
bottom of the orchard. They always flew over
the place with rather a heavy business-like flight,
alighted on a low branch of the farthest apple-tree,
and in a moment dropped to the ground where the long
grass hid them. There they remained five minutes
or more before returning to the tree. Unfortunately
it was a little farther than I could readily see with
my glass, and the most cautious approach alarmed them.
I heard them call nearly every day in loud, strong
voice, “Pe-auk! pe-auk!”
Being thus baffled in my plan of following
them home, I resolved upon a regular search in the
small piece of woods where they always disappeared,
and every morning I spent two or three hours in that
lovely spot looking for any birds, but especially
for the Golden-wing. In all my search, however,
I found but one nest, which may have been his, where
apparently a tragedy had occurred; for from the edge
of the opening the bark was torn off down the trunk,
and in two or three places holes were picked as though
to reach the nest which had been within.
Whatever the drama enacted in that
mysterious home, I was too late to see, and I have
not been able as yet to make close acquaintance with
the free Golden-wing.
The bird that had so interested me
in his whole family I found in a bird store in New
York in the month of November. He was a most
disconsolate-looking object, and so painfully wild
I could scarcely bear to look at him poor,
shy, frightened soul, set up in a cage to be stared
at. I rescued him at once with the intention of
giving him a more retired home, and freedom the moment
spring opened. The change did not at first reassure
him, and he was so frantic that his cage was covered
to shut out the sights till he was accustomed to the
sounds of a household. Gradually, an inch or
two at a time, the cover that hid the world from him
was reduced, till at the end of three weeks he could
endure the removal of the last corner without going
absolutely mad.
On the first day an opening a few
inches wide was left in his screen, so that he might
look out if he chose, and I took my seat as far as
possible from him, with my back to him, and a hand-glass
so arranged that I could see him. As soon as
the room was quiet he went to the opening and cautiously
thrust his long bill and his head as far as the eye
beyond the edge so that he could see me. I kept
perfectly still, while he watched me several minutes
with evident interest, and I was glad to see that
it was simply fright and not idiocy that caused his
panics.
Many emotions of the bird were most
comically expressed by hammering. In embarrassment
or alarm, when not so great as to drive him wild, he
resorted to that diversion, and the more disturbed,
the louder and faster his blows. If in utter
despair, as when I set his house in order for the
day, he dropped to the floor on the farthest side,
put his head in the corner, and pounded the tray with
great violence. Every wire in the cage in turn
he tested with taps of his beak, thus amusing himself
hours at a time, sitting, as was his custom, crouched
upon the perch or on the floor. In this way,
too, he tried the quality of the plastered wall behind
his cage, and was evidently pleased to find it yielding,
for he bored many holes and tore off much paper, before
he was discovered and provided with a background of
wood to exercise upon.
The unhappy bird had a serious time
learning to eat mocking-bird food with his long, curved
beak; he never became very expert at it, but was as
awkward as a child learning to feed itself. He
first thrust it like a dagger its whole length into
his dish, took out a mouthful, then turned his head
sidewise, shook it and snapped his bill one side and
the other, making a noise as if choking. When
this performance was over, he scraped his beak against
the wires and picked off the fragments daintily with
the tip. When he had eaten he left a straight,
smooth hole in the food, like a stab, two inches deep
and perhaps half an inch in diameter. In drinking
he made the same movements, filling his mouth, throwing
back his head, and swallowing with great efforts.
All of the Golden-wing’s attitudes
were peculiar; as, for instance, he never liked to
face one, but always turned his back upon spectators
and looked at them over his shoulder. In sleeping
he changed his position often, and was as restless
as a nervous old man. Sometimes he slept on the
perch, puffed out into a ball like other birds, head
buried in his feathers, tail broad-spread and curled
under the perch, as though it needed something to
rest against. If he began his night’s rest
(or unrest) in this position, in a few hours he would
drop heavily to the floor, scramble about a little,
and then climb to one of the supports that kept the
wires in place, ten inches from the bottom of the cage.
There he settled himself comfortably, head buried again,
tail pressed against the wires, and looking more like
a spot on the wall than a bird.
He often took naps in the daytime
on the floor with his head in the corner, like a bad
boy in punishment, his head drawn down into his shoulders
and his bill thrust up into the air at an angle of
forty-five degrees. If this tired him, he simply
turned his bill down at about the same angle, and
tried it that way awhile.
He was an exceedingly early bird,
always settled to sleep long before any other in the
room, and he slept very soundly, being not easily
wakened and breathing in long, steady respirations
like a person in sleep. Indeed he startled me
very much the first time I noticed him. The breathing
was regular and strong, equal in duration to my own
as I listened, and I was sure some one was in the
room. I hastened to light the gas to look for
the burglar, and it was not until I had made thorough
search that I discovered who was the guilty one.
He dreamed also, if one may judge by the sounds that
came from his cage at night, complaining, whining,
almost barking like the “yaps” of a young
puppy, and many sorts of indescribable noises.
The Golden-wing was extremely fond
of hanging against the side of his cage on the support
spoken of above. Not only did he sleep in that
position, but dress his plumage, turning his head back
over his body and sides, and even arranging the feathers
of his breast, each one by itself, with scrupulous
care. Like many others this bird objected to
having his cage used as a perch by his neighbors.
He expressed his sentiments by quick jerks, first
of the shoulders and then of the whole body, and if
the intruder did not take the hint, he opened his enormous
bill and took hold of a stray toe, which usually drove
away the most impertinent.
The door of the cage was opened to
my captive as soon as he became quiet and happy within
it. After his first surprise and dismay at finding
himself in the big world again, he enjoyed it very
much. Being unable to fly through the loss of
some wing feathers, his cage was placed on the floor,
and he ran in and out at pleasure. He was more
than usually intelligent about it, too; for although
the door was small, and he had to lower his head to
pass through, he was never at a loss for an instant.
One thing that shows a bird’s
characteristics and that I have never seen any two
do in exactly the same way, is to explore a room when
first released from a cage. This bird, like his
predecessors, had his own peculiar notion, which was
to go behind everything. He squeezed himself
between a trunk, or a heavy piece of furniture, and
the wall, where it did not seem possible that one
of his size could pass, and showed so great an inclination
to go through a hole in the open-work fire-board that
I hastily covered it up. After a while he tested
the matting and carefully investigated, by light taps
of his bill, each separate nail. His step was
heavy, and he did not hop, but ran around with a droll
little patter of the feet, like a child’s footsteps.
Having exhausted the novelty of the
floor, he turned his eyes upward, perhaps noticing
that the other birds were higher in the room, where
they had taken refuge when he made his sudden and somewhat
alarming appearance among them. He did not try
to fly, but he was not without resources; he could
jump, and no one could outdo him in climbing, or in
holding on. After a moment’s apparent consideration
of the means at his command, he ran to the corner
and mounted a trunk by springing up halfway, holding
on a moment in some mysterious manner, and then by
a second jump landing on top. From that point
it was easy to reach the bird’s table, and there
was a ladder placed for the benefit of another that
could not fly. This ladder he at once pounced
upon, and used as if he had practiced on one all his
life.
I shut the cage-door at the upper
end to keep him out of his neighbor’s house,
while the owner, an American wood-thrush, stood upon
the roof, looking ruefully at this appropriation of
his private property. Upon reaching the closed
door the traveler jumped across to another cage nearly
a foot away. This was a small affair occupied
by an English goldfinch, who was then at home and
not pleased by the call, as he at once made known.
Golden-wing, however, perhaps with the idea of returning
past insults from the saucy little finch, jerked himself
all around the cage, inserting his long bill as though
trying to reach something inside.
Having wearied of annoying the enemy,
he sprang back to the ladder, descended by the table
and trunk to the floor as he had gone up, without
a moment’s hesitation as to the way, which proved
him to possess unusual intelligence. He did not
take the trouble to climb down, but put his two feet
together and jumped heavily like a child, a very odd
movement for a bird. It was his constant habit
in the cage to jump from the perch to the floor, and
from one that was two inches above the tray he often
stepped down backwards, which I never before saw a
bird do.
When after three hours of exploration
he returned to his home, the door was closed and the
cage hung up. He was satisfied with his first
outing, and refreshed himself with a nap at once.
But the first thing the next morning he came down
to his door and pecked the wires, looking over at
me most intelligently, plainly asking to have it opened.
He never mistook the position of the door, and if
knocking had not the desired effect, he took hold
of a wire and shook and rattled it till he was attended
to.
It was interesting to see how familiar
he suddenly became, when no effort had been made to
induce him to be so. I never had so much trouble
to win the confidence of a bird, but when won, the
surrender was complete. He came up to me freely
and allowed me to catch him in my hand without resistance,
which is very uncommon. (Perhaps I ought to say that
I do not try to tame my birds.) He displayed a child-like,
confiding disposition, both in his unreasoning terror
at first, and his unquestioning faith at last.
These investigations were conducted
without a sound, for the bird was entirely silent
while awake. But there came a day when he made
a curious exhibition of his ability. It was the
ninth of February, and the goldfinch was calling,
as he often did. The woodpecker sat on his perch
with wings held tightly against his sides, “humped”
up as though he were high-shouldered. The plumage
of his breast was puffed out so broadly that it came
over the wings, and in a front view completely hid
them, while the feathers of his shoulders were erected
till he resembled a lady with a fur shoulder cape.
Withal, his head was drawn down to his body, and his
beak pointed upward at an angle of forty-five degrees.
In this peculiar and absurd position he began a strange
little song, ludicrously weak and low for a bird of
his size. The tones were delivered in a sharp
staccato style, like “picking” the strings
of a violin very softly, several notes uttered with
queer sidewise jerks of the head, and eyes apparently
fixed on the goldfinch. After a phrase or two
he scraped his bill violently and then began again.
This performance he varied by bowing
his head many times, swaying his whole body from side
to side, flirting his tail and shaking his wings.
It was an extraordinary display, but whether his manner
of making himself agreeable, or of expressing contempt,
I could only guess. The goldfinch looked on with
interest, though I think he understood it no better
than I did; he seemed surprised, but rather pleased,
for he repeated his calls, and the Golden-wing kept
up the strange exhibition for some time.
I became greatly attached to my beautiful
bird, which appeared, in the presence of his wise
and wary room-mates, cat-birds and thrushes, like a
big, clumsy, but affectionate baby. It was solely
on his account and principally, I must confess, to
try and surprise a wild bird at the above described
entertainment so as to determine its character, that
I wished to make acquaintance with its free relations,
study their ways when at liberty in their own haunts,
and have a glimpse if possible of the Golden-wing
babies.
A year later I had the opportunity
I so much desired of making acquaintance with the
young of this family. I was sitting one morning
on the edge of a deep ravine filled with trees, deeply
engaged in the study of another bird, when suddenly
a stranger came with an awkward flop against the trunk
of a tree not ten feet from me. I saw in an instant
that it was the infant I had looked for so long.
He was exactly like the parents, with a somewhat shorter
tail. I should hardly have suspected his youthfulness
but for his clumsy movements, and the fact that he
did not at once take flight, which a Golden-wing more
experienced in the ways of human-kind would have done
instantly. He seemed somewhat exhausted by his
flight, and clung to the trunk, with soft dark eyes
fixed upon me, ready to move if I did.
I did not; I sat motionless for half
an hour and watched him. When somewhat rested
he dodged around the other side of the trunk, and peeped
at me through a fork in the branches. Then he
scrambled upon a small branch, where he perched crosswise.
But he had trouble to keep his balance in that position,
so he climbed about till he found a limb fully two
inches in diameter, on which he could rest in the favorite
flicker attitude lengthwise. Then
with his head outward to the world at large, and his
tail turned indifferently toward me, whom
he doubtless regarded as a permanent and lifeless
feature of the landscape, he settled himself,
crouched flat against the bark, for a comfortable nap.
All this time I had been conscious
of low Golden-wing talk about me; the familiar “wick-up!
wick-up!” almost in a whisper, a softened “pe-auk!”
from the ravine, and the more distant “laugh,”
so called. The infant on the tree heard too.
He moved his head, listened and looked, but whether
or not they were words of caution and advice from the
wiser ones of his race, he refused to be frightened
and did not move till I rose to leave him, when, greatly
startled, he took flight across the ravine.