I think I’ve mentioned before that I’m a birder
and I’ve been keeping a list since 2003. I finally got to 200 birds last year,
which was a real milestone for me. So what’s next?
I’ve got the quantity, so I’m going for the
quality. Not that the birds already on my list aren’t great! I’ve seen some
remarkable birds … but there are still those that aren’t yet on my list. The
elusive ones. The maddening ones.
Then there’s the Big One (although it’s small),
the bird so amazing that it’s hard to believe it’s real.
The painted bunting.
I look once again in the bird book and shake my
head. Not only do I wonder how such a colorful bird can exist, but I wonder how
it’s possible I haven’t seen one yet.
It’s not for lack of trying. I’ve searched in
areas where they’re supposed to be found. I’ve quizzed my fellow birders. Last
year, based on a tip, I found a good place to look, but I was too early in the
season. This year I tried again, almost a month later.
Some of you might be asking why I’m doing this,
why it matters.
To answer that, let me tell you about last
weekend.
The weather was fantastic and I took a
well-known highway north of Pittsburg, where I missed my turn (that sign was
pretty small!) and had to turn around. Then the paved road turned to gravel,
which didn’t make my Toyota very happy. I kept going, though, until I reached
the small town of Mulberry, Kansas. I couldn’t remember where I’d gone last
year, so I ended up driving around various roads, trying to find a good spot
with thickets that might be inviting to a little feathered work of art.
That was the first half hour or so.
Finally I drove along a rural road that looked
familiar. Ahead of me I could see a hazy shape in the middle of the road and
another perched atop a telephone pole, so I pulled over to use the binoculars.
The one in the road was a good-sized turkey and the one on the pole was a
kestrel, so I took that as a good sign and parked the car. I walked back along
the road and around a corner, where I came upon a chirping field. Actually, it
was a field full of chirping birds. I must have tried for ten minutes, but not
a single one of those birds showed itself. I’m pretty sure they were dickcissels,
which usually perch in plain view, but these were determined to evade me.
So there I stood, staring at a field of birds,
none of which I could see, and wondering why I was even there.
Then I heard it.
There was an odd squawk, followed by three
little sounds that are hard to describe. I can tell you that I’d never heard
that before. It came again: squawk, squawk, followed by almost bell-like
sounds, a real contrast. That was intriguing, so I turned my back on the field
(if you birds don’t want to be seen, so be it!) and studied the trees on the
other side of the road.
Then I remembered a hard rule of birding: it’s
easier to bird by sight than by sound. In other words, you can hear the birds
(like those in the field) but you might not see them, especially when the trees
have all of their leaves. It’s better to watch for movement and then you’ve got
something.
I had nothing, except for the sound … which had stopped.
I told myself to walk away because I would
never see it in all those leaves. I told myself that it had probably flown away
anyway.
But I stayed. And I heard it again. Then I took
three steps to my left … and there it was.
It was sitting out on a bare branch in plain
sight and singing so I’d know it was the one.
I stared through the binoculars, making little
mental notes, although I had already guessed what it was.
Nope. It wasn’t a painted bunting. But it was
still pretty cool: a yellow-breasted chat. That was good enough to be #203 on
my list!
After that, I drove around some more. I found a
beautiful spot with running water (one of my favorite sounds in nature), trees
and a preening Eastern Phoebe that let me get a good look at him. I walked
along that road to the sound of a calling red-shouldered hawk.
And that’s what it’s all about, I guess.
Birding takes me out of my own little world and shows me another one. It lets
me meditate on nature,
discover the unexpected, feel a sense of accomplishment when I spot and identify a bird. Even when I don’t see anything new, I still see
something worth seeing.
And someday I’m going to see that painted
bunting.