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III
HARD FARE SUCH a winter as was that of 1880-81— deep snows and zero
weather for nearly three months — proves especially trying to the wild
creatures that attempt to face it. The supply of fat (or fuel) with which their
bodies become stored in the fall is rapidly exhausted by the severe and
uninterrupted cold, and the sources from which fresh supplies are usually
obtained are all but wiped out. Even the fox was very hard pressed and reduced
to the unusual straits of eating frozen apples; the pressure of hunger must be
great, indeed, to compel Reynard to take up with such a diet. A dog will eat
corn, but he cannot digest it, and I doubt if the fox extracted anything more
than the cider from the frozen and thawed apples. They perhaps served to amuse
and occupy his stomach for the time. Humboldt says wolves eat earth, especially
clay, during winter, and Pliny makes a similar observation. In Greenland the
dog eats seaweed when other food fails. In tropical countries, during the
tropical winter, many savage tribes eat clay. It distends their stomachs, and
in a measure satisfies the cravings of hunger. During the season referred to,
the crows appeared to have little else than frozen apples for many weeks; they
hung about the orchards as a last resort, and, after scouring the desolate
landscape over, would return to their cider with resignation, but not with
cheerful alacrity. They grew very bold at times, and ventured quite under my
porch, and filched the bones that Lark, the dog, had left. I put out some corn
on the wall near by, and discovered that crows will not eat corn in the winter,
except as they can break up the kernels. It is too hard for their gizzards to
grind. Then the crow, not being properly a granivorous bird, but a carnivorous,
has not the digestive, or rather the pulverizing power of the domestic fowls.
The difficulty also during such a season of coming at the soil and obtaining
gravel-stones, which, in such cases, are really the millstones, may also have
something to do with it. Corn that has been planted and has sprouted, crows
will swallow readily enough, because it is then soft, and is easily ground. My
impression has always been that in spring and summer they will also pick up any
chance kernels the planters may have dropped. But, as I observed them the past
winter, they always held the kernel under one foot upon the wall, and picked it
to pieces before devouring it. This is the manner of the jays also. The jays,
perhaps, had a tougher time during the winter than the crows, because they do
not eat fish or flesh, but depend mainly upon nuts. A troop of them came
eagerly to my ash-heap one morning, which had just been uncovered by the thaw,
but they found little except cinders for their gizzards, which, maybe, was what
they wanted. They had foraged nearly all winter upon my neighbor's corn-crib,
and probably their millstones were dull and needed replacing. They reached the
corn through the opening between the slats, and were the envy of the crows, who
watched them from the near trees, but dared not venture up. The chickadee,
which is an insectivorous bird, will eat corn in winter. It will carry a kernel
to the limb of a tree, where, held beneath its tiny foot, it will peck out the
eye or chit of the corn, — the germinal part only. I have also seen the
woodpecker in winter eat the berries of the poison ivy. Quails will eat the
fruit of the poison sumac, and grouse are killed with their crops distended
with the leaves of the laurel. Grouse also eat the berries of the bitter-sweet.
The general belief
among country-people that the jay hoards up nuts for winter use has probably
some foundation in fact, though one is at a loss to know where he could place
his stores so that they would not be pilfered by the mice and the squirrels. An
old hunter told me he had seen jays secreting beechnuts in a knothole in a
tree. Probably a red squirrel saw them, too, and laughed behind his tail. One
day, in October, two friends of mine, out hunting, saw a blue jay carrying off
chestnuts to a spruce swamp. He came and went with great secrecy and dispatch.
He had several hundred yards to fly each way, but occupied only a few minutes
each trip. The hunters lay in wait to shoot him, but so quickly would he seize
his chestnut and be off, that he made more than a dozen trips before they
killed him. A lady writing to
me from Iowa says: “I must tell you what I saw a blue jay do last winter.
Flying down to the ground in front of the house, he put something in the dead
grass, drawing the grass over it, first on one side, then on the other, tramped
it down just exactly as a squirrel would, then walked around the spot,
examining it to see if it was satisfactory. After he had flown away, I went out
to see what he had hidden; it was a nicely shucked peanut that he had laid up
for a time of scarcity.” Since then I have myself made similar observations. I
have several times seen jays carry off chestnuts and hide them here and there
upon the ground. They put only one in a place, and covered it up with grass or
leaves. Instead, therefore, of hoarding up nuts for future use, when the jay
carries them off, he is really planting them. When the snows come these nuts
are lost to him, even if he remembered the hundreds of places where he had
dropped them. May not this fact account in a measure' for the oak and chestnut
trees that spring up where a pine forest has been cleared from the ground?
Probably the crows secrete nuts in the same way. The acorns at least germinate
and remain small, insignificant shoots until the pine is cut away and they have
a chance. In almost any pine wood these baby oaks may be seen scattered here
and there. Jays will carry off and secrete corn in the same way. One winter I
put out ears of corn near my study window to attract these birds. They were not
long in finding them out, nor long in stripping the cob of its kernels. They
finally came to the window-sill and picked up the loose kernels I scattered
there. At no time did they eat any on the spot, but were solely intent on
carrying it away. They would take eight or ten grains at a time, apparently
holding it in the throat and bill. They carried it away and deposited it in all
manner of places; sometimes on the ground, sometimes in decayed trees. Once I
saw a jay deposit his load in an old worm's nest in a near-by apple-tree.
Whether these stores were visited afterward by the birds, I cannot say.
Red-headed woodpeckers have been seen to fill crevices in posts and rails with
acorns, where they were found and eaten by gray squirrels. Oregon and Mexican
woodpeckers drill holes in decayed trees, and store them with acorns, putting
but one acorn in a hole, but hundreds of holes in a tree or branch. A bevy of quail in
my vicinity got through the winter by feeding upon the little black beans
contained in the pods of the common locust. For many weeks their diet must have
been almost entirely leguminous. The surface snow in the locust-grove which
they frequented was crossed in every direction with their fine tracks, like a
chain-stitch upon muslins, showing where they went from pod to pod and
extracted the contents. Where quite a large branch, filled with pods, lay upon
the snow, it looked as if the whole flock had dined or breakfasted off it. The
wind seemed to shake down the pods about as fast as they were needed. When a
fresh fall of snow had blotted out everything, it was not many hours before the
wind had placed upon the cloth another course; but it was always the same old
course — beans, beans. What would the birds and the fowls do during such
winters, if the trees and the shrubs and plants all dropped their fruit and
their seeds in the fall, as they do their leaves? They would nearly all perish.
The apples that cling to the trees, the pods that hang to the lowest branches,
and the seeds that the various weeds and grasses hold above the deepest snows,
alone make it possible for many birds to pass the winter among us. The red
squirrel, too, what would he do? He lays up no stores like the provident
chipmunk, but scours about for food in all weathers, feeding upon the seeds in
the cones of the hemlock that still cling to the tree, upon sumac-bobs, and the
seeds of frozen apples. I have seen the ground under a wild apple-tree that
stood near the woods completely covered with the “chonkings” of the frozen
apples, the work of the squirrels in getting at the seeds; not an apple had
been left, and apparently not a seed had been lost. But the squirrels in this
particular locality evidently got pretty hard up before spring, for they
developed a new source of food-supply. A young bushy-topped sugar-maple, about
forty feet high, standing beside a stone fence near the woods, was attacked,
and more than half denuded of its bark. The object of the squirrels seemed to
be to get at the soft, white, mucilaginous substance (cambium layer) between
the bark and the wood. The ground was covered with fragments of the bark, and
the white, naked stems and branches had been scraped by fine teeth. When the
sap starts in the early spring, the squirrels add this to their scanty
supplies. They perforate the bark of the branches of the maples with their
chisel-like teeth, and suck the sweet liquid as it slowly oozes out. It is not
much as food, but evidently it helps. I have said the red
squirrel does not lay by a store of food for winter use, like the chipmunk and
the wood-mice; yet in the fall he sometimes hoards in a tentative, temporary
kind of way. I have seen his savings — butternuts and black walnuts — stuck
here and there in saplings and trees near his nest; sometimes carefully
inserted in the upright fork of a limb or twig. One day, late in November, I
counted a dozen or more black walnuts put away in this manner in a little grove
of locusts, chestnuts, and maples by the roadside, and could but smile at the
wise forethought of the rascally squirrel. His supplies were probably safer
that way than if more elaborately hidden. They were well distributed; his eggs
were not all in one basket, and he could go away from home without any fear
that his storehouse would be broken into in his absence. The next week, when I
passed that way, the nuts were all gone but two. I saw the squirrel that
doubtless laid claim to them, on each occasion. There is one thing
the red squirrel knows unerringly that I do not (there are probably several
other things); that is, on which side of the butternut the meat lies. He always
gnaws through the shell so as to strike the kernel broadside, and thus easily
extract it; while to my eyes there is no external mark or indication, in the
form or appearance of the nut, as there is in the hickory-nut, by which I can
tell whether the edge or the side of the meat is toward me. But examine any
number of nuts that the squirrels have rifled, and, as a rule, you will find
they always drill through the shell at the one spot where the meat will be most
exposed. It stands them in hand to know, and they do know. Doubtless, if
butternuts were a main source of my food, and I were compelled to gnaw into
them, I should learn, too, on which side my bread was buttered. A hard winter
affects the chipmunks very little; they are snug and warm in their burrows in
the ground and under the rocks, with a bountiful store of nuts or grain. I have
heard of nearly a half-bushel of chestnuts being taken from a single den. They
usually hole in November, and do not come out again till March or April, unless
the winter is very open and mild. Gray squirrels, when they have been partly
domesticated in parks and groves near dwellings, are said to hide their nuts
here and there upon the ground, and in winter to dig them up from beneath the
snow, always hitting the spot accurately. A pair of flying squirrels which I
observed one season in an unoccupied country-house had a pile of large, fine
chestnuts near their nest till spring, when the nuts disappeared. They probably
kept them till the period of greatest scarcity, and until their young made
demands upon them. The woodpeckers and
chickadees doubtless find food as plentiful during severe winters as during
more open ones, because they confine their search almost entirely to the trunks
and branches of trees. where the latter pick up the eggs of insects and various
microscopic tidbits, and where the former find their accustomed fare of eggs
and larvæ also. An enamel of ice upon the trees alone puts an embargo upon
their supplies. At such seasons the ruffed grouse “buds” or goes hungry; while
the snowbirds, snow buntings, Canada sparrows, goldfinches, shore larks, and
redpolls are dependent upon the weeds and grasses that rise above the snow, and
upon the litter of the haystack and barnyard. Neither do the deep snows and the
severe cold materially affect the supplies of the rabbit. The deeper the snow,
the nearer he is brought to the tops of the tender bushes and shoots. I see in
my walks where he has cropped the tops of the small, bushy, soft maples,
cutting them slantingly as you would do with a knife, and quite as smoothly.
Indeed, the mark was so like that of a knife that, notwithstanding the tracks,
it was only after the closest scrutiny that I was convinced it was the sharp,
chisel-like teeth of the rabbit. He leaves no chips, and apparently makes clean
work of every twig he cuts off. The wild or native
mice usually lay up stores in the fall, in the shape of various nuts, grain,
and seeds, yet the provident instinct, as in the red squirrel and in the jay,
seems only partly developed in them; instead of carrying these supplies home,
they hide them in the nearest convenient place. I have known them to carry a
pint or more of hickory nuts and deposit them in a pair of boots standing in
the chamber of an outhouse. Near the chestnut-trees they will fill little
pocket-like depressions in the ground with chestnuts; in a grain-field they
carry the grain under stones; under some cover beneath cherry-trees they
collect great numbers of cherry-pits. Hence, when cold weather comes, instead
of staying at home like the chipmunk, they gad about hither and thither looking
up their supplies. One may see their tracks on the snow everywhere in the woods
and fields and by the roadside. The advantage of this way of living is that it
leads to activity, and probably to sociability. These wild mice are
fond of bees and of honey, and they apparently like nothing better than to be
allowed to take up their quarters in winter in some vacant space in a hive of
bees. A chamber just over the bees seems to be preferred, as here they get the
benefit of the warmth generated by the insects. One very cold winter I wrapped
up one of my hives with my shawl. Before long I noticed that the shawl was
beginning to have a very torn and tattered appearance. On examination, I found
that a native mouse had established itself in the top of the hive, and had
levied a ruinous tax upon the shawl to make itself a nest. Never was a fabric
more completely reduced into its original elements than were large sections of
that shawl. It was a masterly piece of analysis. The work of the wheel and the
loom was exactly reversed, and what was once shawl was now the finest and
softest of wool. The white-footed mouse is much more common along the fences
and in the woods than one would suspect. One winter day I set a mouse-trap —
the kind known as the delusion trap — beneath some ledges in the edge of the
woods, to determine what species of mouse was most active at this season. The
snow fell so deeply that I did not visit my trap for two or three weeks. When I
did so, it was literally packed full of white-footed mice. There were seven in
all, and not room for another. Our woods are full of these little creatures,
and they appear to have a happy, social time of it, even in the severest
winters. Their little tunnels under the snow and their hurried strides upon its
surface may be noted everywhere. They link tree and stump, or rock and tree, by
their pretty trails. They evidently travel for adventure and to hear the news,
as well as for food. They know that foxes and owls are about, and they keep
pretty close to cover. When they cross an exposed place, they do it hurriedly. Such a winter as I
have referred to probably destroys a great many of our half-migratory birds.
The mortality appears to be the greatest in the Border States, where so many
species, like the sparrows, robins, bluebirds, meadowlarks, kinglets, etc.,
usually pass the cold season. A great many birds are said to have died in New
Jersey and Pennsylvania, including game-birds. A man in Chester County saw a
fox digging in the snow; on examining the spot, he found half a dozen quails
frozen to death. Game-birds and nearly all other birds will stand the severest
weather if food is plenty; but to hunger and cold both, the hardiest species
may succumb. Meadowlarks often
pass the winter as far north as Pennsylvania. A man residing in that State
relates how, in the height of the severest cold, three half-famished larks came
to his door in quest of food. He removed the snow from a small space, and
spread the poor birds a lunch of various grains and seeds. They ate heartily,
and returned again the next day, and the next, each time bringing one or more
drooping and half-starved companions with them, till there was quite a flock of
them. Their deportment changed, their forms became erect and their plumage
glossy, and the feeble mendicants became strong and vivacious birds again.
These larks fell in good hands, but I am persuaded that this species suffered
more than any other of our birds during that winter. In the spring they were
unusually late in making their appearance, — the first one noted by me on the
9th of April, — and they were scarce in my locality during the whole season. Birds not of a
feather flock together in winter. Hard times or a common misfortune makes all
the world akin. A Noah's ark with antagonistic species living in harmony is not
an improbable circumstance in a forty-day and a forty-night rain. In severe
weather, when the snow lies deep on the ground, I frequently see a loose,
heterogeneous troop of birds pass my door, engaged in the common search for
food: snowbirds, Canada sparrows, and goldfinches on the ground, and kinglets
and nuthatches in the tree above, — all drifting slowly in the same direction,
— the snowbirds and sparrows closely associated, but the goldfinches rather
clannish and exclusive, while the kinglets and nuthatches keep still more aloof.
These birds were probably not drawn, even thus loosely, together by any social
instincts, but by a common want; all were hungry, and the activity of one
species attracted and drew after it another and another. “I will look that way,
too,” the kinglet and creeper probably said, when they saw the other birds
busy, and heard their merry voices. |