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IV THE TRAGEDIES OF
THE NESTS THE life of the
birds, especially of our migratory song-birds, is a series of adventures and of
hairbreadth escapes by flood and field. Very few of them probably die a natural
death, or even live out half their appointed days. The home instinct is strong
in birds, as it is in most creatures; and I am convinced that every spring a
large number of those which have survived the Southern campaign return to their
old haunts to breed. A Connecticut farmer took me out under his porch one April
day, and showed me a phœbe-bird's nest six stories high. The same bird had no
doubt returned year after year; and as there was room for only one nest upon
her favorite shelf, she had each season reared a new superstructure upon the
old as a foundation. I have heard of a white robin — an albino — that nested
several years in succession in the suburbs of a Maryland city. A sparrow with a
very marked peculiarity of song I have heard several seasons in my own
locality. But the birds do not all live to return to their old haunts: the
bobolinks and starlings run a gauntlet of fire from the Hudson to the Savannah,
and the robins and meadowlarks and other song-birds are shot by boys and
pot-hunters in great numbers, — to say nothing of their danger from hawks and
owls. But of those that do return, what perils beset their nests, even in the
most favored localities! The cabins of the early settlers, when the country was
swarming with hostile Indians, were not surrounded by such dangers. The tender
households of the birds are not only exposed to hostile Indians in the shape of
cats and collectors, but to numerous murderous and bloodthirsty animals,
against whom they have no defense but concealment. They lead the darkest kind
of pioneer life, even in our gardens and orchards, and under the walls of our
houses. Not a day or a night passes, from the time the eggs are laid till the
young are flown, when the chances are not greatly in favor of the nest being
rifled and its contents devoured, — by owls, skunks, minks, and coons at night,
and by crows, jays, squirrels, weasels, snakes, and rats during the day.
Infancy, we say, is hedged about by many perils; but the infancy of birds is
cradled and pillowed in peril. An old Michigan settler told me that the first
six children that were born to him died; malaria and teething invariably
carried them off when they had reached a certain age; but other children were
born, the country improved, and by and by the babies weathered the critical
period, and the next six lived and grew up. The birds, too, would no doubt
persevere six times and twice six times, if the season were long enough, and
finally rear their family, but the waning summer cuts them short, and but few
species have the heart and strength to make even the third trial. The first
nest-builders in spring, like the first settlers near hostile tribes, suffer
the most casualties. A large proportion of the nests of April and May are
destroyed; their enemies have been many months without eggs, and their
appetites are keen for them. It is a time, too, when other food is scarce, and
the crows and squirrels are hard put. But the second nests of June, and still
more the nests of July and August, are seldom molested. It is rarely that the
nest of the goldfinch or cedar-bird is harried. My neighborhood on
the Hudson is perhaps exceptionally unfavorable as a breeding haunt for birds,
owing to the abundance of fish crows and of red squirrels; and the season of
which this chapter is mainly a chronicle, the season of 1881, seems to have
been a black-letter one even for this place, for at least nine nests out of
every ten that I observed during that spring and summer failed of their proper issue.
From the first nest I noted, which was that of a bluebird, — built (very
imprudently, I thought at the time)) in a squirrel-hole in a decayed
apple-tree, about the last of April, and which came to naught, even the
mother-bird, I suspect, perishing by a violent death, — to the last, which was
that of a snowbird, observed in August, among the Catskills, deftly concealed
in a mossy bank by the side of a road that skirted a wood, where the tall
thimble blackberries grew in abundance, and from which the last young one was
taken, when it was about half grown, by some nocturnal walker or daylight
prowler, some untoward fate seemed hovering about them. It was a season of
calamities, of violent deaths, of pillage and massacre, among our feathered
neighbors. For the first time I noticed that the orioles were not safe in their
strong pendent nests. Three broods were started in the apple-trees, only a few
yards from the house, where, for several previous seasons, the birds had nested
without molestation; but this time the young were all destroyed when about half
grown. Their chirping and chattering, which was so noticeable one day, suddenly
ceased the next. The nests were probably plundered at night, and doubtless by
the little red screech owl, which I know is a denizen of these old orchards,
living in the deeper cavities of the trees. The owl could alight upon the top
of the nest, and easily thrust his murderous claw down into its long pocket and
seize the young and draw them forth. The tragedy of one of the nests was
heightened, or at least made more palpable, by one of the half-fledged birds,
either in its attempt to escape or while in the clutches of the enemy, being
caught and entangled in one of the horse-hairs by which the nest was stayed and
held to the limb above. There it hung bruised and dead, gibbeted to its own
cradle. This nest was the theatre of another little tragedy later in the
season. Some time in August a bluebird, indulging its propensity to peep and
pry into holes and crevices, alighted upon it and probably inspected the
interior; but by some unlucky move it got its wings entangled in this same
fatal horse-hair. Its efforts to free itself appeared only to result in its
being more securely and hopelessly bound; and there it perished; and there its form,
dried and embalmed by the summer heats, was yet hanging in September, the
outspread wings and plumage showing nearly as bright as in life. A correspondent
writes me that one of his orioles got entangled in a cord while building her
nest, and that, though by the aid of a ladder he reached and liberated her, she
died soon afterward. He also found a “chippie” (called also “hair-bird”)
suspended from a branch by a horse-hair, beneath a partly-constructed nest. I
heard of a cedar-bird caught and destroyed in the same way, and of two young
bluebirds, around whose legs a horse-hair had become so tightly wound that the
legs withered up and dropped off. The birds became fledged, and finally left
the nest with the others. Such tragedies are probably quite common. Before the advent
of civilization in this country, the oriole probably built a much deeper nest
than it usually does at present. When now it builds in remote trees and along
the borders of the woods, its nest, I have noticed, is long and gourd-shaped;
but in orchards and near dwellings it is only a deep cup or pouch. It shortens
it up in proportion as the danger lessens. Probably a succession of disastrous
years, like the one under review, would cause it to lengthen it again beyond
the reach of owl's talons or jay-bird's beak. The first song
sparrow's nest I observed in the spring of 1881 was in a field under a fragment
of a board, the board being raised from the ground a couple of inches by two
poles. It had its full complement of eggs, and probably sent forth a brood of
young birds, though as to this I cannot speak positively, as I neglected to
observe it further. It was well sheltered and concealed, and was not easily
come at by any of its natural enemies, save snakes and weasels. But concealment
often avails little. In May, a song sparrow, which had evidently met with
disaster earlier in the season, built its nest in a thick mass of woodbine
against the side of my house, about fifteen feet from the ground. Perhaps it
took the hint from its cousin, the English sparrow. The nest was admirably
placed, protected from the storms by the overhanging eaves and from all eyes by
the thick screen of leaves. Only by patiently watching the suspicious bird, as
she lingered near with food in her beak, did I discover its whereabouts. That
brood is safe, I thought, beyond doubt. But it was not: the nest was pillaged
one night, either by an owl, or else by a rat that had climbed into the vine,
seeking an entrance to the house. The mother bird, after reflecting upon her ill-luck
about a week, seemed to resolve to try a different system of tactics, and to
throw all appearances of concealment aside. She built a nest a few yards from
the house, beside the drive, upon a smooth piece of greensward. There was not a
weed or a shrub or anything whatever to conceal it or mark its site. The
structure was completed, and incubation had begun, before I discovered what was
going on. “Well, well,” I said, looking down upon the bird almost at my feet,
“this is going to the other extreme indeed; now the cats will have you.” The
desperate little bird sat there day after day, looking like a brown leaf
pressed down in the short green grass. As the weather grew hot, her position
became very trying. It was no longer a question of keeping the eggs warm, but
of keeping them from roasting. The sun had no mercy on her, and she fairly
panted in the middle of the day. In such an emergency the male robin has been
known to perch above the sitting female and shade her with his outstretched
wings. But in this case there was no perch for the male bird, had he been
disposed to make a sunshade of himself. I thought to lend a hand in this
direction myself, and so stuck a leafy twig beside the nest. This was probably
an unwise interference: it guided disaster to the spot; the nest was broken up,
and the mother bird was probably caught, as I never saw her afterward. For several
previous summers a pair of kingbirds had reared, unmolested, a, brood of young
in an apple-tree, only a few yards from the house; but during this season
disaster overtook them also. The nest was completed, the eggs laid, and
incubation had just begun, when, one morning about sunrise, I heard loud cries
of distress and alarm proceed from the old apple-tree. Looking out of the
window, I saw a crow, which I knew to be a fish crow, perched upon the edge of
the nest, hastily bolting the eggs. The parent birds, usually so ready for the
attack, seemed overcome with grief and alarm. They fluttered about in the most
helpless and bewildered manner, and it was not till the robber fled on my
approach that they recovered themselves and charged upon him. The crow scurried
away with upturned, threatening head, the furious kingbirds fairly upon his
back. The pair lingered around their desecrated nest for several days, almost
silent, and saddened by their loss, and then disappeared. They probably made
another trial elsewhere. The fish crow only
fishes when it has destroyed all the eggs and young birds it can find. It is
the most despicable thief and robber among our feathered creatures. From May to
August it is gorged with the fledgelings of the nest. It is fortunate that its
range is so limited. In size it is smaller than the common crow, and is a much
less noble and dignified bird. Its caw is weak and feminine, — a sort of split
and abortive caw, that stamps it the sneak-thief it is. This crow is common
farther south, but is not found in this State, so far as I have observed,
except in the valley of the Hudson. One season a pair
of them built a nest in a Norway spruce that stood amid a dense growth of other
ornamental trees near a large unoccupied house. They sat down amid plenty. The
wolf established himself in the fold. The many birds — robins, thrushes,
finches, vireos, pewees — that seek the vicinity of dwellings (especially of
these large country residences with their many trees and park-like grounds),
for the greater safety of their eggs and young, were the easy and convenient
victims of these robbers. They plundered right and left, and were not disturbed
till their young were nearly fledged, when some boys, who had long before
marked them as their prize, rifled the nest. The song-birds
nearly all build low their cradle is not upon the treetop. It is only birds of
prey that fear danger from below more than from above, and that seek the higher
branches for their nests. A line five feet from the ground would run above more
than half the nests, and one ten feet would bound more than three fourths of
them. It is only the oriole, the wood pewee, the tanager, the warbling vireo,
and two or three warblers, that, as a rule, go higher than this. The crows and
jays and other enemies of the birds have learned to explore this belt pretty
thoroughly. But the leaves and the protective coloring of most nests baffle
them as effectually, no doubt, as they do the professional oölogist. The nest
of the red-eyed vireo is one of the most artfully placed in the wood. It is
just beyond the point where the eye naturally pauses in its search; namely, on
the extreme end of the lowest branch of the tree, usually four or five feet
from the ground. One looks up and down and through the tree, — shoots his
eye-beams into it as he might discharge his gun at some game hidden there, but
the drooping tip of that low horizontal branch, — who would think of pointing
his piece just there? If a crow or other marauder were to alight upon the
branch or upon those above it, the nest would be screened from him by the large
leaf that usually forms a canopy immediately above it. The nest-hunter,
standing at the foot of the tree and looking straight before him, might
discover it easily, were it not for its soft, neutral gray tint which blends so
thoroughly with the trunks and branches of trees. Indeed, I think there is no
nest in the woods — no arboreal nest — so well concealed. The last one I saw
was pendent from the end of a low branch of a maple, that nearly grazed the
clapboards of an unused hay-barn in a remote backwoods clearing. I peeped
through a crack, and saw the old birds feed the nearly fledged young within a
few inches of my face. And yet the cowbird finds this nest and drops her
parasitical egg in it. Her tactics in this as in other cases are probably to
watch the movements of the parent bird. She may often be seen searching
anxiously through the trees or bushes for a suitable nest, yet she may still
oftener be seen perched upon some good point of observation watching the birds
as they come and go about her. There is no doubt that, in many cases, the
cowbird makes room for her own illegitimate egg in the nest by removing one of
the bird's own. When the cowbird
finds two or more eggs in a nest in which she wishes to deposit her own, she
will remove one of them. I found a sparrow's nest with two sparrow's eggs and
one cowbird's egg, and another egg lying a foot or so below it on the ground. I
replaced the ejected egg, and the next day found it again removed, and another
cowbird's egg in its place. I put it back the second time, when it was again
ejected, or destroyed, for I failed to find it anywhere. Very alert and
sensitive birds like the warblers, often bury the strange egg beneath a second
nest built on top of the old. A lady, living in the suburbs of an eastern city,
one morning heard cries of distress from a pair of house wrens that had a nest
in a honeysuckle on her front porch. On looking out of the window, she beheld
this little comedy, — comedy from her point of view, but no doubt grim tragedy
from the point of view of the wrens: a cowbird with a wren's egg in its beak
running rapidly along the walk, with the outraged wrens forming a procession
behind it, screaming, scolding, and gesticulating as only these voluble little
birds can. The cowbird had probably been surprised in the act of violating the
nest, and the wrens were giving her a piece of their minds. Every cowbird is
reared at the expense of two or more song-birds. For every one of these dusky
little pedestrians there amid the grazing cattle there are two or more
sparrows, or vireos, or warblers, the less. It is a big price to pay, — two
larks for a bunting, — two sovereigns for a shilling; but Nature does not
hesitate occasionally to contradict herself in just this way. The young of the
cowbird is disproportionately large and aggressive, one might say hoggish. When
disturbed, it will clasp the nest and scream and snap its beak threateningly.
One hatched out in a song sparrow's nest which was under my observation, and
would soon have overridden and overborne the young sparrow which came out of
the shell a few hours later, had I not interfered from time to time and lent
the young sparrow a helping hand. Every day I would visit the nest and take the
sparrow out from under the pot-bellied interloper, and place it on top, so that
presently it was able to hold its own against its enemy. Both birds became
fledged and left the nest about the same time. Whether the race was an even one
after that, I know not. I noted but two
warblers' nests during that season, one of the black-throated blue-back and one
of the redstart, — the latter built in an apple-tree but a few yards from a
little rustic summer-house where I idle away many summer days. The lively
little birds, darting and flashing about, attracted my attention for a week
before I discovered their nest. They probably built it by working early in the
morning, before I appeared upon the scene, as never saw them with
material in their beaks. Guessing from their movements that the nest was in a
large maple that stood near by, I climbed the tree and explored it thoroughly,
looking especially in the forks of the branches, as the authorities say these
birds build in a fork. But no nest could I find. Indeed, how can one by
searching find a bird's nest? I overshot the mark; the nest was much nearer me,
almost under my very nose, and I discovered it, not by searching, but by a
casual glance of the eye, while thinking of other matters. The bird was just
settling upon it as I looked up from my book and caught her in the act. The
nest was built near the end of a long, knotty, horizontal branch of an apple-tree,
but effectually hidden by the grouping of the leaves; it had three eggs, one of
which proved to be barren. The two young birds grew apace, and were out of the
nest early in the second week; but something caught one of them the first
night. The other probably grew to maturity, as it disappeared from the vicinity
with its parents after some days. The blue-back's
nest was scarcely a foot from the ground, in a little bush situated in a low,
dense wood of hemlock and beech and maple amid the Catskills, — a deep,
massive, elaborate structure, in which the sitting bird sank till her beak and
tail alone were visible above the brim. It was a misty, chilly day when I
chanced to find the nest, and the mother bird knew instinctively that it was
not prudent to leave her four half-incubated eggs uncovered and exposed for a
moment. When I sat down near the nest, she grew very uneasy, and, after trying
in vain to decoy me away by suddenly dropping from the branches and dragging
herself over the ground as if mortally wounded, she approached and timidly and
half doubtingly covered her eggs within two yards of where I sat. I disturbed
her several times, to note her ways. There came to be something almost
appealing in her looks and manner, and she would keep her place on her precious
eggs till my outstretched hand was within a few feet of her. Finally, I covered
the cavity of the nest with a dry leaf. This she did not remove with her beak,
but thrust her head deftly beneath it and shook it off upon the ground. Many of
her sympathizing neighbors, attracted by her alarm note, came and had a peep at
the intruder, and then flew away, but the male bird did not appear upon the
scene. The final history of this nest I am unable to give, as I did not again
visit it till late in the season, when, of course, it was empty. Years pass without
my finding a brown thrasher's nest; it is not a nest you are likely to stumble
upon in your walk; it is hidden as a miser hides his gold, and watched as
jealously. The male pours out his rich and triumphant song from the tallest
tree he can find, and fairly challenges you to come and look for his treasures
in his vicinity. But you will not find them if you go. The nest is somewhere on
the outer circle of his song; he is never so imprudent as to take up his stand
very near it. The artists who draw those cozy little pictures of a brooding
mother bird, with the male perched but a yard away in full song, do not copy
from nature. The thrasher's nest I found was thirty or forty rods from the
point where the male was wont to indulge in his brilliant recitative. It was in
an open field under a low ground-juniper. My dog disturbed the sitting bird as
I was passing near. The nest could be seen only by lifting up and parting away
the branches. All the arts of concealment had been carefully studied. It was
the last place you would think of looking, and, if you did look, nothing was
visible but the dense green circle of the low-spreading juniper. When you
approached, the bird would keep her place till you had begun to stir the
branches, when she would start out, and, just skimming the ground, make a
bright brown line to the near fence and bushes. I confidently expected that
this nest would escape molestation, but it did not. Its discovery by myself and
dog probably opened the door for ill-luck, as one day, not long afterward, when
I peeped in upon it, it was empty. The proud song of the male had ceased from
his accustomed tree, and the pair were seen no more in that vicinity. The phoebe-bird is
a wise architect, and perhaps enjoys as great an immunity from danger, both in
its person and its nest, as any other bird. Its modest, ashen-gray suit is the
color of the rocks where it builds, and the moss of which it makes such free
use gives to its nest the look of a natural growth or accretion. But when it
comes into the barn or under the shed to build, as it so frequently does, the
moss is rather out of place. Doubtless in time the bird will take the hint, and
when she builds in such places will leave the moss out. I noted but two nests
the summer I am speaking of: one in a barn failed of issue, on account of the
rats, I suspect, though the little owl may have been the depredator; the other,
in the woods, sent forth three young. This latter nest was most charmingly and
ingeniously placed. I discovered it while in quest of pond-lilies, in a long,
deep, level stretch of water in the woods. A large tree had blown over at the
edge of the water, and its dense mass of upturned roots, with the black, peaty
soil filling the interstices, was like the fragment of a wall several feet
high, rising from the edge of the languid current. In a niche in this earthy
wall, and visible and accessible only from the water, a phoebe had built her
nest and reared her brood. I paddled my boat up and came alongside prepared to
take the family aboard. The young, nearly ready to fly, were quite undisturbed
by my presence, having probably been assured that no danger need be apprehended
from that side. It was not a likely place for minks, or they would not have
been so secure. I noted but one
nest of the wood pewee, and that, too, like so many other nests, failed of
issue. It was saddled upon a small dry limb of a plane-tree that stood by the
roadside, about forty feet from the ground. Every day for nearly a week, as I
passed by, I saw the sitting bird upon the nest. Then one morning she was not
in her place, and on examination the nest proved to be empty, — robbed, I had
no doubt, by the red squirrels, as they were very abundant in its vicinity, and
appeared to make a clean sweep of every nest. The wood pewee builds an
exquisite nest, shaped and finished as if cast in a mould. It is modeled
without and within with equal neatness and art, like the nest of the
hummingbird and the little gray gnatcatcher. The material is much more
refractory than that used by either of these birds, being, in the present case,
dry, fine cedar twigs; but these were bound into a shape as rounded and compact
as could be moulded out of the most plastic material. Indeed, the nest of this
bird looks precisely like a large, lichen-covered, cup-shaped excrescence of
the limb upon which it is placed. And the bird, while sitting, seems entirely
at her ease. Most birds seem to make very hard work of incubation. It is a kind
of martyrdom which appears to tax all their powers of endurance. They have such
a fixed, rigid, predetermined look, pressed down into the nest and as
motionless as if made of cast-iron. But the wood pewee is an exception. She is
largely visible above the rim of the nest. Her attitude is easy and graceful;
she moves her head this way and that, and seems to take note of whatever goes
on about her; and if her neighbor were to drop in for a little social chat, she
could doubtless do her part. In fact, she makes light and easy work of what, to
most other birds, is such a serious and engrossing matter. If it does not look
like play with her, it at least looks like leisure and quiet contemplation. There is no
nest-builder that suffers more from crows and squirrels and other enemies than
the wood thrush. It builds as openly and unsuspiciously as if it thought all
the world as honest as itself. Its favorite place is the fork of a sapling,
eight or ten feet from the ground, where it falls an easy prey to every
nest-robber that comes prowling through the woods and groves. It is not a bird
that skulks and hides, like the catbird, the brown thrasher, the chat, or the
chewink, and its nest is not concealed with the same art as theirs. Our
thrushes are all frank, open-mannered birds; but the veery and the hermit build
upon the ground, where they at least escape the crows, owls, and jays, and
stand a better chance to be overlooked by the red squirrel and weasel also;
while the robin seeks the protection of dwellings and outbuildings. For years I
have not known the nest of a wood thrush to succeed. During the season referred
to I observed but two, both apparently a second attempt, as the season was well
advanced, and both failures. In one case, the nest was placed in a branch that
an apple-tree, standing near a dwelling, held out over the highway. The
structure was barely ten feet above the middle of the road, and would just
escape a passing load of hay. It was made conspicuous by the use of a large
fragment of newspaper in its foundation, — an unsafe material to build upon in
most cases. Whatever else the press may guard, this particular newspaper did
not guard this nest from harm. It saw the egg and probably the chick, but not
the fledgeling. A murderous deed was committed above the public highway, but
whether in the open day or under cover of darkness I have no means of knowing.
The frisky red squirrel was doubtless the culprit. The other nest was in a
maple sapling, within a few yards of the little rustic summer-house already
referred to. The first attempt of the season, I suspect, had failed in a more
secluded place under the hill; so the pair had come up nearer the house for
protection. The male sang in the trees near by for several days before I
chanced to see the nest. The very morning, I think, it was finished, I saw a
red squirrel exploring a tree but a few yards away; he probably knew what the
singing meant as well as I did. I did not see the inside of the nest, for it
was almost instantly deserted, the female having probably laid a single egg,
which the squirrel had devoured. If I were a bird,
in building my nest I should follow the example of the bobolink, placing it in
the midst of a broad meadow, where there was no spear of grass, or flower, or
growth unlike another to mark its site. I judge that the bobolink escapes the
dangers to which I have adverted as few or no other birds do. Unless the mowers
come along at an earlier date than she has anticipated, that is, before July
1st, or a skunk goes nosing through the grass, which is unusual, she is as safe
as bird well can be in the great open of nature. She selects the most
monotonous and uniform place she can find amid the daisies or the timothy and
clover, and places her simple structure upon the ground in the midst of it.
There is no concealment, except as the great conceals the little, as the desert
conceals the pebble, as the myriad conceals the unit. You may find the nest
once, if your course chances to lead you across it, and your eye is quick
enough to note the silent brown bird as she darts swiftly away; but step three
paces in the wrong direction, and your search will probably be fruitless. My
friend and I found a nest by accident one day, and then lost it again one
minute afterward. I moved away a few yards to be sure of the mother bird,
charging my friend not to stir from his tracks. When I returned, he had moved
two paces, he said, (he had really moved four), and we spent a half hour
stooping over the daisies and the buttercups, looking for the lost clew. We
grew desperate, and fairly felt the ground over with our hands, but without
avail. I marked the spot with a bush, and came the next day, and, with the bush
as a centre, moved about it in slowly increasing circles, covering, I thought,
nearly every inch of ground with my feet, and laying hold of it with all the
visual power I could command, till my patience was exhausted, and I gave up,
baffled. I began to doubt the ability of the parent birds themselves to find
it, and so secreted myself and watched. After much delay, the male bird
appeared with food in his beak, and, satisfying himself that the coast was
clear, dropped into the grass which I had trodden down in my search. Fastening
my eye upon a particular meadow-lily, I walked straight to the spot, bent down,
and gazed long and intently into the grass. Finally my eye separated the nest
and its young from its surroundings. My foot had barely missed them in my
search, but by how much they had escaped my eye I could not tell. Probably not
by distance at all, but simply by unrecognition. They were virtually invisible.
The dark gray and yellowish brown dry grass and stubble of the meadow-bottom
were exactly copied in the color of the half-fledged young. More than that,
they hugged the nest so closely and formed such a compact mass, that though
there were five of them, they preserved the unit of expression, — no single
head or form was defined; they were one, and that one was without shape or
color, and not separable, except by closest scrutiny, from the one of the
meadow-bottom. That nest prospered, as bobolinks' nests doubtless generally do;
for, notwithstanding the enormous slaughter of the birds during their fall
migrations by Southern sportsmen, the bobolink appears to hold its own, and its
music does not diminish in our Northern meadows. Birds with whom the
struggle for life is the sharpest seem to be more prolific than those whose
nest and young are exposed to fewer dangers. The robin, the sparrow, the pewee,
etc., will rear, or make the attempt to rear, two and sometimes three broods in
a season; but the bobolink, the oriole, the kingbird, the goldfinch, the
cedar-bird, the birds of prey, and the woodpeckers, that build in safe retreats
in the trunks of trees, have usually but a single brood. If the bobolink reared
two broods, our meadows would swarm with them. I noted three nests
of the cedar-bird in August in a single orchard, all productive, but each with
one or more unfruitful eggs in it. The cedar-bird is the most silent of our
birds, having but a single fine note, so far as I have observed, but its
manners are very expressive at times. No bird known to me is capable of
expressing so much silent alarm while on the nest as this bird. As you ascend
the tree and draw near it, it depresses its plumage and crest, stretches up its
neck, and becomes the very picture of fear. Other birds, under like
circumstances, hardly change their expression at all till they launch into the
air, when by their voice they express anger rather than alarm. I have referred to
the red squirrel as a destroyer of the eggs and young of birds. I think the
mischief it does in this respect can hardly be overestimated. Nearly all birds
look upon it as their enemy, and attack and annoy it when it appears near their
breeding haunts. Thus, I have seen the pewee, the cuckoo, the robin, and the
wood thrush pursuing it with angry voice and gestures. A friend of mine saw a
pair of robins attack one in the top of a tall tree so vigorously that they
caused it to lose its hold, when it fell to the ground, and was so stunned by
the blow as to allow him to pick it up. If you wish the birds to breed and
thrive in your orchard and groves, kill every red squirrel that infests the
place; kill every weasel also. The weasel is a subtle and arch enemy of the
birds. It climbs trees and explores them with great ease and nimbleness. I have
seen it do so on several occasions. One day my attention was arrested by the
angry notes of a pair of brown thrashers that were flitting from bush to bush
along an old stone row in a remote field. Presently I saw what it was that
excited them, — three large red weasels, or ermines, coming along the stone
wall, and leisurely and half playfully exploring every tree that stood near it.
They had probably robbed the thrashers. They would go up the trees with great
ease, and glide serpent-like out upon the main branches. When they descended
the tree they were unable to come straight down, like a squirrel, but went
around it spirally. How boldly they thrust their heads out of the wall, and
eyed me and sniffed me as I drew near, — their round, thin ears, their
prominent, glistening, bead-like eyes, and the curving, snake-like motions of
the head and neck being very noticeable. They looked like blood-suckers and
egg-suckers. They suggested something extremely remorseless and cruel. One
could understand the alarm of the rats when they discover one of these
fearless, subtle, and circumventing creatures threading their holes. To flee
must be like trying to escape death itself. I was one day standing in the woods
upon a flat stone, in what at certain seasons was the bed of a stream, when one
of these weasels came undulating along and ran under the stone upon which I was
standing. As I remained motionless, he thrust out his wedge-shaped head, and
turned it back above the stone as if half in mind to seize my foot; then he
drew back, and presently went his way. These weasels often hunt in packs like
the British stoat. When I was a boy, my father one day armed me with an old
musket and sent me to shoot chipmunks around the corn. While watching the
squirrels, a troop of weasels tried to cross a bar-way where I sat, and were so
bent on doing it that I fired at them, boy-like, simply to thwart their
purpose. One of the weasels was disabled by my shot, but the troop was not discouraged,
and, after making several feints to cross, one of them seized the wounded one
and bore it over, and the pack disappeared in the wall on the other side. Let me conclude
this chapter with two or three more notes about this alert enemy of the birds and
lesser animals, the weasel. A farmer one day
heard a queer growling sound in the grass; on approaching the spot he saw two
weasels contending over a mouse; both had hold of the mouse, pulling in
opposite directions, and they were so absorbed in the struggle that the farmer
cautiously put his hands down and grabbed them both by the back of the neck. He
put them in a cage, and offered them bread and other food. This they refused to
eat, but in a few days one of them had eaten the other up, picking his bones
clean, and leaving nothing but the skeleton. The same farmer was
one day in his cellar when two rats came out of a hole near him in great haste,
and ran up the cellar wall and along its top till they came to a floor timber
that stopped their progress, when they turned at bay, and looked excitedly back
along the course they had come. In a moment a weasel, evidently in hot pursuit
of them, came out of the hole, and, seeing the farmer, checked his course and
darted back. The rats had doubtless turned to give him fight, and would
probably have been a match for him. The weasel seems to
track its game by scent. A hunter of my acquaintance was one day sitting in the
woods, when he saw a red squirrel run with great speed up a tree near him, and
out upon a long branch, from which he leaped to some rocks, and disappeared
beneath them. In a moment a weasel came in full course upon his trail, ran up
the tree, then out along the branch, from the end of which he leaped to the
rocks as the squirrel did, and plunged beneath them. Doubtless the
squirrel fell a prey to him. The squirrel's best game would have been to have
kept to the higher treetops, where he could easily have distanced the weasel.
But beneath the rocks he stood a very poor chance. I have often wondered what
keeps such an animal as the weasel in check, for they are quite rare. They
never need go hungry, for rats and squirrels and mice and birds are everywhere.
They probably do not fall a prey to any other animal, and very rarely to man.
But the circumstances or agencies that check the increase of any species of
animal or bird are, as Darwin says, very obscure and but little known. |