FEBRUARY FEATHERS
February holes are most interesting
places and one never knows what will be found in the
next one investigated. It is a good plan, in one’s
walks in the early fall, to make a mental map of all
the auspicious looking trees and holes, and then go
the rounds of these in winter as a hunter
follows his line of traps. An old, neglected orchard
may seem perfectly barren of life; insects dead, leaves
fallen, and sap frozen; but the warm hearts of these
venerable trees may shelter much beside the larvae
of boring beetles, and we may reap a winter harvest
of which the farmer knows nothing.
Poke a stick into a knothole and stir
up the leaves at the bottom of the cavity, and then
look in. Two great yellow eyes may greet you,
glaring intermittently, and sharp clicks may assail
your ears. Reach in with your gloved hand and
bring the screech owl out. He will blink in the
sunshine, ruffling up his feathers until he is twice
his real size. The light partly blinds him, but
toss him into the air and he will fly without difficulty
and select with ease a secluded perch. The instant
he alights a wonderful transformation comes over him.
He stiffens, draws himself as high as possible, and
compresses his feathers until he seems naught but the
slender, broken stump of some bough, ragged
topped (thanks to his “horns"), gray and lichened.
It is little short of a miracle how this spluttering,
saucer-eyed, feathered cat can melt away into woody
fibre before our very eyes.
We quickly understand why in the daytime
the little owl is so anxious to hide his form from
public view. Although he can see well enough to
fly and to perch, yet the bright sunlight on the snow
is too dazzling to permit of swift and sure action.
All the birds of the winter woods seem to know this
and instantly take advantage of it. Sparrows,
chickadees, and woodpeckers go nearly wild with excitement
when they discover the little owl, hovering about
him and occasionally making darts almost in his very
face. We can well believe that as the sun sets,
after an afternoon of such excitement, they flee in
terror, selecting for that night’s perch the
densest tangle of sweetbrier to be found.
One hollow tree may yield a little
gray owl, while from the next we may draw a red one;
and the odd thing about this is that this difference
in colour does not depend upon age, sex, or season,
and no ornithologist can say why it occurs. What
can these little fellows find to feed upon these cold
nights, when the birds seek the most hidden and sheltered
retreats? We might murder the next owl we come
across; but would any fact we might discover in his
poor stomach repay us for the thought of having needlessly
cut short his life, with its pleasures and spring courtships,
and the delight he will take in the half a dozen pearls
over which he will soon watch?
A much better way is to examine the
ground around his favourite roosting place, where
we will find many pellets of fur and bones, with now
and then a tiny skull. These tell the tale, and
if at dusk we watch closely, we may see the screech
owl look out of his door, stretch every limb, purr
his shivering song, and silently launch out over the
fields, a feathery, shadowy death to all small mice
who scamper too far from their snow tunnels.
When you feel like making a new and
charming acquaintance, take your way to a dense clump
of snow-laden cedars, and look carefully over their
trunks. If you are lucky you will spy a tiny gray
form huddled close to the sheltered side of the bark,
and if you are careful you may approach and catch
in your hand the smallest of all our owls, for the
saw-whet is a dreadfully sleepy fellow in the daytime.
I knew of eleven of these little gray gnomes dozing
in a clump of five small cedars.
The cedars are treasure-houses in
winter, and many birds find shelter among the thick
foliage, and feast upon the plentiful supply of berries,
when elsewhere there seems little that could keep a
bird’s life in its body. When the tinkling
of breaking icicles is taken up by the wind and re-echoed
from the tops of the cedars, you may know that a flock
of purple finches is near, and so greedy and busy
are they that you may approach within a few feet.
These birds are unfortunately named, as there is nothing
purple about their plumage. The males are a delicate
rose-red, while the females look like commonplace
sparrows, streaked all over with black and brown.
There are other winter birds, whose
home is in the North, with a similar type of coloration.
Among the pines you may see a flock of birds, as large
as a sparrow, with strange-looking beaks. The
tips of the two mandibles are long, curved, and pointed,
crossing each other at their ends. This looks
like a deformity, but is in reality a splendid cone-opener
and seed-extracter. These birds are the crossbills.
Even in the cold of a February day,
we may, on very rare occasions, be fortunate enough
to hear unexpected sounds, such as the rattle of a
belted kingfisher, or the croak of a night heron;
for these birds linger until every bit of pond or
lake is sealed with ice; and when a thaw comes, a
lonely bat may surprise us with a short flight through
the frosty air, before it returns to its winter’s
trance.
Of course, in the vicinity of our
towns and cities, the most noticeable birds at this
season of the year (as indeed at all seasons) are the
English sparrows and (at least near New York City)
the starlings, those two foreigners which have wrought
such havoc among our native birds. Their mingled
flocks fly up, not only from garbage piles and gutters,
but from the thickets and fields which should be filled
with our sweet-voiced American birds. It is no
small matter for man heedlessly to interfere with
Nature. What may be a harmless, or even useful,
bird in its native land may prove a terrible scourge
when introduced where there are no enemies to keep
it in check. Nature is doing her best to even
matters by letting albinism run riot among the sparrows,
and best of all by teaching sparrow hawks to nest
under our eaves and thus be on equal terms with their
sparrow prey. The starlings are turning out to
be worse than the sparrows. Already they are
invading the haunts of our grackles and redwings.
On some cold day, when the sun is
shining, visit all the orchards of which you know,
and see if in one or more you cannot find a good-sized,
gray, black, and white bird, which keeps to the topmost
branch of a certain tree. Look at him carefully
through your glasses, and if his beak is hooked, like
that of a hawk, you may know that you are watching
a northern shrike, or butcher bird. His manner
is that of a hawk, and his appearance causes instant
panic among small birds. If you watch long enough
you may see him pursue and kill a goldfinch, or sparrow,
and devour it. These birds are not even distantly
related to the hawks, but have added a hawk’s
characteristics and appetite to the insect diet of
their nearest relations. If ever shrikes will
learn to confine their attacks to English sparrows,
we should offer them every encouragement.
All winter long the ebony forms of
crows vibrate back and forth across the cold sky.
If we watch them when very high up, we sometimes see
them sail a short distance, and without fail, a second
later, the clear “Caw! caw!” comes
down to us, the sound-waves unable to keep pace with
those of light, as the thunder of the storm lags behind
the flash. These sturdy birds seem able to stand
any severity of the weather, but, like Achilles, they
have one vulnerable point, the eyes, which,
during the long winter nights, must be kept deep buried
among the warm feathers.
FISH LIFE
We have all looked down through the
clear water of brook or pond and watched the gracefully
poised trout or pickerel; but have we ever tried to
imagine what the life of one of these aquatic beings
is really like? “Water Babies” perhaps
gives us the best idea of existence below the water,
but if we spend one day each month for a year in trying
to imagine ourselves in the place of the fish, we
will see that a fish-eye view of life holds much of
interest.
What a delightful sensation must it
be to all but escape the eternal downpull of gravity,
to float and turn and rise and fall at will, and all
by the least twitch of tail or limb, for
fish have limbs, four of them, as truly as has a dog
or horse, only instead of fingers or toes there are
many delicate rays extending through the fin.
These four limb-fins are useful chiefly as balancers,
while the tail-fin is what sends the fish darting
through the water, or turns it to right or left, with
incredible swiftness.
If we were able to examine some inhabitant
of the planet Mars our first interest would be to
know with what senses they were endowed, and these
finny creatures living in their denser medium, which
after a few seconds would mean death to us, excite
the same interest. They see, of course, having
eyes, but do they feel, hear, and smell!
Probably the sense of taste is least
developed. When a trout leaps at and catches
a fly he does not stop to taste, otherwise the pheasant
feather concealing the cruel hook would be of little
use. When an animal catches its food in the water
and swallows it whole, taste plays but a small part.
Thus the tongue of a pelican is a tiny flap all but
lost to view in its great bill.
Water is an excellent medium for carrying
minute particles of matter and so the sense of smell
is well developed. A bit of meat dropped into
the sea will draw the fish from far and wide, and
a slice of liver will sometimes bring a score of sharks
and throw them into the greatest excitement.
Fishes are probably very near-sighted,
but that they can distinguish details is apparent
in the choice which a trout exhibits in taking certain
coloured artificial flies. We may suppose from
what we know of physics that when we lean over and
look down into a pool, the fishy eyes which peer up
at us discern only a dark, irregular mass. I have
seen a pickerel dodge as quickly at a sudden cloud-shadow
as at the motion of a man wielding a fish pole.
We can be less certain about the hearing
of fishes. They have, however, very respectable
inner ears, built on much the same plan as in higher
animals. Indeed many fish, such as the grunts,
make various sounds which are plainly audible even
to our ears high above the water, and we cannot suppose
that this is a useless accomplishment. But the
ears of fishes and the line of tiny tubes which extends
along the side may be more effective in recording
the tremors of the water transmitted by moving objects
than actual sound.
Watch a lazy catfish winding its way
along near the bottom, with its barbels extended,
and you will at once realise that fishes can feel,
this function being very useful to those kinds which
search for their food in the mud at the bottom.
Not a breath of air stirs the surface
of the woodland pond, and the trees about the margin
are reflected unbroken in its surface. The lilies
and their pads lie motionless, and in and out through
the shadowy depths, around the long stems, float a
school of half a dozen little sunfish. They move
slowly, turning from side to side all at once as if
impelled by one idea. Now and then one will dart
aside and snap up a beetle or mosquito larva, then
swing back to its place among its fellows. Their
beautiful scales flash scarlet, blue, and gold, and
their little hand-and-foot fins are ever trembling
and waving. They drift upward nearer the surface,
the wide round eyes turning and twisting in their
sockets, ever watchful for food and danger. Without
warning a terrific splash scatters them, and when
the ripples and bubbles cease, five frightened sunfish
cringe in terror among the water plants of the bottom
mud. Off to her nest goes the kingfisher, bearing
to her brood the struggling sixth.
Later in the day, when danger seemed
far off, a double-pointed vise shot toward the little
group of “pumpkin seeds” and a great blue
heron swallowed one of their number. Another,
venturing too far beyond the protection of the lily
stems and grass tangle of the shallows, fell victim
to a voracious pickerel. But the most terrible
fate befell when one day a black sinuous body came
swiftly through the water. The fish had never
seen its like before and yet some instinct told them
that here was death indeed and they fled as fast as
their fins could send them. The young otter had
marked the trio and after it he sped, turning, twisting,
following every movement with never a stop for breath
until he had caught his prey.
But the life of a fish is not all
tragedy, and the two remaining sunfish may live in
peace. In spawning time they clear a little space
close to the water of the inlet, pulling up the young
weeds and pushing up the sandy bottom until a hollow,
bowl-like nest is prepared. Thoreau tells us that
here the fish “may be seen early in summer assiduously
brooding, and driving away minnows and larger fishes,
even its own species, which would disturb its ova,
pursuing them a few feet, and circling round swiftly
to its nest again; the minnows, like young sharks,
instantly entering the empty nests, meanwhile, and
swallowing the spawn, which is attached to the weeds
and to the bottom, on the sunny side. The spawn
is exposed to so many dangers that a very small proportion
can ever become fishes, for beside being the constant
prey of birds and fishes, a great many nests are made
so near the shore, in shallow water, that they are
left dry in a few days, as the river goes down.
These and the lampreys are the only fishes’
nests that I have observed, though the ova of some
species may be seen floating on the surface.
The sunfish are so careful of their charge that you
may stand close by in the water and examine them at
your leisure. I have thus stood over them half
an hour at a time, and stroked them familiarly without
frightening them, suffering them to nibble my fingers
harmlessly, and seen them erect their dorsal fins in
anger when my hand approached their ova, and have
even taken them gently out of the water with my hand;
though this cannot be accomplished by a sudden movement,
however dexterous, for instant warning is conveyed
to them through their denser element, but only by
letting the fingers gradually close about them as
they are poised over the palm, and with the utmost
gentleness raising them slowly to the surface.
Though stationary, they kept up a constant sculling
or waving motion with their fins, which is exceedingly
graceful, and expressive of their humble happiness;
for unlike ours, the element in which they live is
a stream which must be constantly resisted. From
time to time they nibble the weeds at the bottom or
overhanging their nests, or dart after a fly or worm.
The dorsal fin, besides answering the purpose of a
keel, with the anal, serves to keep the fish upright,
for in shallow water, where this is not covered, they
fall on their sides. As you stand thus stooping
over the sunfish in its nest, the edges of the dorsal
and caudal fins have a singular dusty golden reflection,
and its eyes, which stand out from the head, are transparent
and colourless. Seen in its native element, it
is a very beautiful and compact fish, perfect in all
its parts, and looks like a brilliant coin fresh from
the mint. It is a perfect jewel of the river,
the green, red, coppery, and golden reflections of
its mottled sides being the concentration of such rays
as struggle through the floating pads and flowers
to the sandy bottom, and in harmony with the sunlit
brown and yellow pebbles.”
When the cold days of winter come
and the ice begins to close over the pond, the sunfish
become sluggish and keep near the bottom, half-hibernating
but not unwilling to snap at any bit of food which
may drift near them. Lying prone on the ice we
may see them poising with slowly undulating fins,
waiting, in their strange wide-eyed sleep, for the
warmth which will bring food and active life again.
3rd. Fish. Master, I
marvel how the fishes live in the sea.
1st. Fish. Why, as men do a-land:
the great ones eat up the
little ones.
Shakespeare.
TENANTS OF WINTER BIRDS’ NESTS
When we realise how our lives are
hedged about by butchers, bakers, and luxury-makers,
we often envy the wild creatures their independence.
And yet, although each animal is capable of finding
its own food and shelter and of avoiding all ordinary
danger, there is much dependence, one upon another,
among the little creatures of fur and feathers.
The first instinct of a gray squirrel,
at the approach of winter, is to seek out a deep,
warm, hollow limb, or trunk. Nowadays, however,
these are not to be found in every grove. The
precepts of modern forestry decree that all such unsightly
places must be filled with cement and creosote and
well sealed against the entrance of rain and snow.
When hollows are not available, these hardy squirrels
prepare their winter home in another way. Before
the leaves have begun to loosen on their stalks, the
little creatures set to work. The crows have
long since deserted their rough nest of sticks in
the top of some tall tree, and now the squirrels come,
investigate, and adopt the forsaken bird’s-nest
as the foundation of their home. The sticks are
pressed more tightly together, all interstices filled
up, and then a superstructure of leafy twigs is woven
overhead and all around. The leaves on these
twigs, killed before their time, do not fall; and
when the branches of the tree become bare, there remains
in one of the uppermost crotches a big ball of leaves, rain
and snow proof, with a tiny entrance at one side.
On a stormy mid-winter afternoon we
stand beneath the tree and, through the snowflakes
driven past by the howling gale, we catch glimpses
of the nest swaying high in air. Far over it
leans, as the branches are whipped and bent by the
wind, and yet so cunningly is it wrought that never
a twig or leaf loosens. We can imagine the pair
of little shadow-tails within, sleeping fearlessly
throughout all the coming night.
But the sleep of the gray squirrel
is a healthy and a natural one, not the half-dead
trance of hibernation; and early next morning their
sharp eyes appear at the entrance of their home and
they are out and off through the tree-top path which
only their feet can traverse. Down the snowy trunks
they come with a rush, and with strong, clean bounds
they head unerringly for their little caches
of nuts. Their provender is hidden away among
the dried leaves, and when they want a nibble of nut
or acorn they make their way, by some mysterious sense,
even through three feet of snow, down to the bit of
food which, months before, they patted out of sight
among the moss and leaves.
It would seem that some exact sub-conscious
sense of locality would be a more probable solution
of this feat than the sense of smell, however keenly
developed, when we consider that dozens of nuts may
be hidden or buried in close proximity to the one
sought by the squirrel.
Even though the birds seem to have
vanished from the earth, and every mammal be deeply
buried in its long sleep, no winter’s walk need
be barren of interest. A suggestion worth trying
would be to choose a certain area of saplings and
underbrush and proceed systematically to fathom every
cause which has prevented the few stray leaves still
upon their stalks from falling with their many brethren
now buried beneath the snow.
The encircling silken bonds of Promethea
and Cynthia cocoons will account for some; others
will puzzle us until we have found the traces of some
insect foe, whose girdling has killed the twig and
thus prevented the leaf from falling at the usual
time; some may be simply mechanical causes, where
a broken twig crotch has fallen athwart another stem
in the course of its downward fall. Then there
is the pitiful remnant of a last summer’s bird’s-nest,
with a mere skeleton of a floor all but disintegrated.
But occasionally a substantial ball
of dead leaves will be noticed, swung amid a tangle
of brier. No accident lodged these, nor did any
insect have aught to do with their position.
Examine carefully the mass of leaves and you will
find a replica of the gray squirrel’s nest, only,
of course, much smaller. This handiwork of the
white-footed or deer mouse can be found in almost
every field or tangle of undergrowth; the nest of a
field sparrow or catbird being used as a foundation
and thickly covered over and tightly thatched with
leaves. Now and then, even in mid-winter, we may
find the owner at home, and as the weasel is the most
bloodthirsty, so the deer mouse is the most beautiful
and gentle of all the fur-coated folk of our woods.
With his coat of white and pale golden brown and his
great black, lustrous eyes, and his timid, trusting
ways, he is altogether lovable.
He spends the late summer and early
autumn in his tangle-hung home, but in winter he generally
selects a snug hollow log, or some cavity in the earth.
Here he makes a round nest of fine grass and upon a
couch of thistledown he sleeps in peace, now and then
waking to partake of the little hoard of nuts which
he has gathered, or he may even dare to frolic about
upon the snow in the cold winter moonlight, leaving
behind him no trace, save the fairy tracery of his
tiny footprints.
Wee, sleekit, cow’rin’,
tim’rous beastie,
O, what a panic’s in thy breastie!
Thou need na start awa sae hasty,
Wi’ bickering brattle!
I wad be laith to rin an’ chase
thee,
Wi’ murd’ring prattle!
Robert
burns.
WINTER HOLES
The decayed hollows which we have
mentioned as so often productive of little owls have
their possibilities by no means exhausted by one visit.
The disturbed owl may take himself elsewhere, after
being so unceremoniously disturbed; but there are
roving, tramp-like characters, with dispositions taking
them here and there through the winter nights, to
whom, at break of day, a hole is ever a sought-for
haven.
So do not put your hand too recklessly
into an owl hole, for a hiss and a sudden nip may
show that an opossum has taken up his quarters there.
If you must, pull him out by his squirming, naked
tail, but do not carry him home, as he makes a poor
pet, and between hen-house traps and irate farmers,
he has good reason, in this part of the country at
least, to be short tempered.
Of course the birds’-nests are
all deserted now, but do not be too sure of the woodpeckers’
holes. The little downy and his larger cousin,
the hairy woodpecker, often spend the winter nights
snug within deep cavities which they have hollowed
out, each bird for itself. I have never known
a pair to share one of these shelters.
Sometimes, in pulling off the loose
bark from a decayed stump, several dry, flattened
scales will fall out upon the snow among the debris
of wood and dead leaves. Hold them close in the
warm palm of your hand for a time and the dried bits
will quiver, the sides partly separate, and behold!
you have brought back to life a beautiful Euvanessa,
or mourning-cloak butterfly. Lay it upon the
snow and soon the awakened life will ebb away and
it will again be stiff, as in death. If you wish,
take it home, and you may warm it into activity, feed
it upon a drop of syrup and freeze it again at will.
Sometimes six or eight of these insects may be found
sheltered under the bark of a single stump, or in a
hollow beneath a stone. Several species share
this habit of hibernating throughout the winter.
Look carefully in old, deserted sheds,
in half-sheltered hollows of trees, or in deep crevice-caverns
in rocks, and you may some day spy one of the strangest
of our wood-folk. A poor little shrivelled bundle
of fur, tight-clasped in its own skinny fingers, with
no more appearance of life in its frozen body than
if it were a mummy from an Egyptian tomb; such is
the figure that will meet your eye when you chance
upon a bat in the deep trance of its winter’s
hibernation. Often you will find six or a dozen
of these stiffened forms clinging close together,
head downward.
As in the case of the sleeping butterfly,
carry one of the bats to your warm room and place
him in a bird-cage, hanging him up on the top wires
by his toes, with his head downward. The inverted
position of these strange little beings always brings
to mind some of the experiences of Gulliver, and indeed
the life of a bat is more wonderful than any fairy
tale.
Probably the knowledge of bats which
most of us possess is chiefly derived from the imaginations
of artists and poets, who, unlike the Chinese, do
not look upon these creatures with much favour, generally
symbolising them in connection with passages and pictures
which relate to the infernal regions. All of
which is entirely unjust. Their nocturnal habits
and our consequent ignorance of their characteristics
are the only causes which can account for their being
associated with the realm of Satan. In some places
bats are called flittermice, but they are more nearly
related to moles, shrews, and other insect-eaters
than they are to mice. If we look at the skeleton
of an animal which walks or hops we will notice that
its hind limbs are much the stronger, and that the
girdle which connects these with the backbone is composed
of strong and heavy bones. In bats a reverse
condition is found; the breast girdle, or bones corresponding
to our collar bones and shoulder blades, are greatly
developed. This, as in birds, is, of course,
an adaptation to give surface for the attachment of
the great propelling muscles of the wings.
Although the hand of a bat is so strangely
altered, yet, as we shall see if we look at our captive
specimen, it has five fingers, as we have, four of
which are very long and thin, and the webs, of which
we have a very noticeable trace in our own hands,
stretch from finger-tip to finger-tip, and to the
body and even down each leg, ending squarely near the
ankle, thus giving the creature the absurd appearance
of having on a very broad, baggy pair of trousers.
When thoroughly warmed up, our bat
will soon start on a tour of inspection of his cage.
He steps rapidly from one wire to another, sometimes
hooking on with all five toes, but generally with
four or three. There seems to be little power
in these toes, except of remaining bent in a hooked
position; for when our bat stops and draws up one
foot to scratch the head, the claws are merely jerked
through the fur by motions of the whole leg, not by
individual movements of the separate toes. In
this motion we notice, for the first time, that the
legs and feet grow in a kind of “spread eagle”
position, making the knees point backward, in the same
direction as the elbows.
We must stop a moment to admire the
beautiful soft fur, a golden brown in colour, with
part of the back nearly black. The tiny inverted
face is full of expression, the bead-like eyes gleaming
brightly from out of their furry bed. The small
moist nostrils are constantly wrinkling and sniffling,
and the large size of the alert ears shows how much
their owner depends upon them for information.
If we suddenly move up closer to the wires, the bat
opens both wings owl-like, in a most threatening manner;
but if we make still more hostile motions the creature
retreats as hastily as it can, changing its method
of progress to an all-fours, sloth-like gait, the
long free thumb of each hand grasping wire after wire
and doing most of the leverage, the hind legs following
passively.
When at what he judges a safe distance
he again hangs pendent, bending his head back to look
earnestly at us. Soon the half-opened wings are
closed and brought close to the shoulders, and in
this, the usual resting position, the large claws
of the thumbs rest on the breast in little furrows
which they have worn in the fur.
Soon drowsiness comes on and a long
elaborate yawn is given, showing the many small needle-like
teeth and the broad red tongue, which curls outward
to a surprising length. Then comes the most curious
process of all. Drawing up one leg, the little
creature deliberately wraps one hand with its clinging
web around the leg and under the arms, and then draws
the other wing straight across the body, holds it
there a moment, while it takes a last look in all
directions. Then lifting its fingers slightly,
it bends its head and wraps all in the full-spread
web. It is most ludicrously like a tragedian,
acting the death scene in “Julius Cæsar,”
and it loses nothing in repetition; for each time the
little animal thus draws its winding sheet about its
body, one is forced to smile as he thinks of the absurd
resemblance.
But all this and much more you will
see for yourself, if you are so fortunate as to discover
the hiding-place of the hibernating bat.
Our little brown bat is a most excellent
mother, and when in summer she starts out on her nocturnal
hunts she takes her tiny baby bat with her. The
weird little creature wraps his long fingers about
his mother’s neck and off they go. When
two young are born, the father bat is said sometimes
to assume entire control of one.
After we come to know more of the
admirable family traits of the fledermaus its
musical German name we shall willingly defend
it from the calumny which for thousands of years has
been heaped upon it.
Hibernation is a strange phenomenon,
and one which is but little understood. If we
break into the death-like trance for too long a time,
or if we do not supply the right kind of food, our
captive butterflies and bats will perish. So
let us soon freeze them up again and place them back
in the care of old Nature. Thus the pleasure is
ours of having made them yield up their secrets, without
any harm to them. Let us fancy that in the spring
they may remember us only as a strange dream which
has come to them during their long sleep.