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VII
WINTER NEIGHBORS THE country is more of a wilderness, more of a wild
solitude, in the winter than in the summer. The wild comes out. The urban, the
cultivated, is hidden or negatived. You shall hardly know a good field from a
poor, a meadow from a pasture, a park from a forest. Lines and boundaries are
disregarded; gates and bar-ways are unclosed; man lets go his hold upon the
earth; title-deeds are deep buried beneath the snow; the best-kept grounds
relapse to a state of nature; under the pressure of the cold, all the wild
creatures become outlaws, and roam abroad beyond their usual haunts. The
partridge comes to the orchard for buds; the rabbit comes to the garden and
lawn; the crows and jays come to the ash-heap and corncrib, the snow buntings
to the stack and to the barnyard; the sparrows pilfer from the domestic fowls;
the pine grosbeak comes down from the north and shears your maples of their
buds; the fox prowls about your premises at night; and the red squirrels find
your grain in the barn or steal the butternuts from your attic. In fact,
winter, like some great calamity, changes the status of most creatures and sets
them adrift. Winter, like poverty, makes us acquainted with strange bedfellows.
For my part, my
nearest approach to a strange bedfellow is the little gray rabbit that has
taken up her abode under my study floor. As she spends the day here and is out
larking at night, she is not much of a bedfellow, after all. It is probable
that I disturb her slumbers more than she does mine. I think she is some
support to me under there, — a silent, wide-eyed witness and backer; a type of
the gentle and harmless in savage nature. She has no sagacity to give me or
lend me, but that soft, nimble foot of hers, and that touch as of cotton
wherever she goes, are worthy of emulation. I think I can feel her good-will
through the floor, and I hope she can mine: When I have a happy thought, I
imagine her ears twitch, especially when I think of the sweet apple I will
place by her doorway at night. I wonder if that fox chanced to catch a glimpse
of her the other night when he stealthily leaped over the fence near by and
walked along between the study and the house? How clearly one could read that
it was not a little dog that had passed there! There was something furtive in
the track; it shied off away from the house and around it, as if eying it
suspiciously; and then it had the caution and deliberation of the fox, — bold,
bold, but not too bold; wariness was in every footprint. If it had been a
little dog that had chanced to wander that way, when he crossed my path he
would have followed it up to the barn and have gone smelling around for a bone;
but this sharp, cautious track held straight across all others, keeping five or
six rods from the house, up the hill, across the highway toward a neighboring
farmstead, with its nose in the air, and its eye and ear alert, so to speak. A winter neighbor of mine, in whom I am interested, and who
perhaps lends me his support after his kind, is a little red owl, whose retreat
is in the heart of an old apple-tree just over the fence. Where he keeps
himself in spring and summer, I do not know, but late every fall, and at
intervals all winter, his hiding-place is discovered by the jays and
nuthatches, and proclaimed from the treetops for the space of half an hour or
so, with all the powers of voice they can command. Four times during one winter
they called me out to behold this little ogre feigning sleep in his den,
sometimes in one apple-tree, sometimes in another. Whenever I heard their
cries, I knew my neighbor was being berated. The birds would take turns at
looking in upon him, and uttering their alarm-notes. Every jay within hearing
would come to the spot, and at once approach the hole in the trunk or limb, and
with a kind of breathless eagerness and excitement take a peep at the owl, and
then join the outcry. When I approached they would hastily take a final look,
and then withdraw and regard my movements intently. After accustoming my eye to
the faint light of the cavity for a few moments, I could usually make out the
owl at the bottom feigning sleep. Feigning, I say, because this is what he
really did, as I first discovered one day when I cut into his retreat with the axe.
The loud blows and the falling chips did not disturb him at all. When I reached
in a stick and pulled him over on his side, leaving one of his wings spread
out, he made no attempt to recover himself, but lay among the chips and
fragments of decayed wood, like a part of themselves. Indeed, it took a sharp
eye to distinguish him. Not till I had pulled him forth by one wing, rather
rudely, did he abandon his trick of simulated sleep or death. Then, like a
detected pickpocket, he was suddenly transformed into another creature. His
eyes flew wide open, his talons clutched my finger, his ears were depressed,
and every motion and look said, “Hands off, at your peril.” Finding this game
did not work, he soon began to “play 'possum” again. I put a cover over my study
wood-box and kept him captive for a week. Look in upon him at any time, night
or day, and he was apparently wrapped in the profoundest slumber; but the live
mice which I put into his box from time to time found his sleep was easily
broken; there would be a sudden rustle in the box, a faint squeak, and then
silence. After a week of captivity I gave him his freedom in the full sunshine:
no trouble for him to see which way and where to go. Just at dusk in the
winter nights, I often hear his soft bur-r-r-r,
very pleasing and bell-like. What a furtive, woody sound it is in the winter
stillness, so unlike the harsh scream of the hawk! But all the ways of the owl
are ways of softness and duskiness. His wings are shod with silence, his
plumage is edged with down. Another owl
neighbor of mine, with whom I pass the time of day more frequently than with
the last, lives farther away. I pass his castle every night on my way to the
post-office, and in winter, if the hour is late enough, am pretty sure to see
him standing in his doorway, surveying the passers-by and the landscape through
narrow slits in his eyes. For four successive winters now have I observed him.
As the twilight begins to deepen, he rises up out of his cavity in the
apple-tree, scarcely faster than the moon rises from behind the hill, and sits
in the opening, completely framed by its outlines of gray bark and dead wood,
and by his protective coloring virtually invisible to every eye that does not
know he is there. Probably my own is the only eye that has ever penetrated his
secret, and mine never would have done so had I not chanced on one occasion to
see him leave his retreat and make a raid upon a shrike that was impaling a
shrew-mouse upon a thorn in a neighboring tree, and which I was watching. Failing
to get the mouse, the owl returned swiftly to his cavity, and ever since, while
going that way, I have been on the lookout for him. Dozens of teams and
foot-passengers pass him late in the day, but he regards them not, nor they
him. When I come along and pause to salute him, he opens his eyes a little
wider, and, appearing to recognize me, quickly shrinks and fades into the
background of his door in a very weird and curious manner. When he is not at
his outlook, or when he is, it requires the best powers of the eye to decide
the point, as the empty cavity itself is almost an exact image of him. If the
whole thing had been carefully studied, it could not have answered its purpose
better. The owl stands quite perpendicular, presenting a front of light mottled
gray; the eyes are closed to a mere slit, the ear-feathers depressed, the beak
buried in the plumage, and the whole attitude is one of silent, motionless
waiting and observation. If a mouse should be seen crossing the highway, or
scudding over any exposed part of the snowy surface in the twilight, the owl
would doubtless swoop down upon it. I think the owl has learned to distinguish
me from the rest of the passers-by; at least, when I stop before him, and he
sees himself observed, he backs down into his den, as I have said, in a very
amusing manner. Whether bluebirds, nuthatches, and chickadees — birds that pass
the night in cavities of trees — ever run into the clutches of the dozing owl,
I should be glad to know. My impression is, however, that they seek out smaller
cavities. An old willow by the roadside blew down one summer, and a decayed
branch broke open, revealing a brood of half-fledged owls, and many feathers
and quills of bluebirds, orioles, and other songsters, showing plainly enough
why all birds fear and berate the owl. The English house
sparrows, which are so rapidly increasing among us, and which must add greatly
to the food supply of the owls and other birds of prey, seek to baffle their
enemies by roosting in the densest evergreens they can find, in the arbor-vita,
and in hemlock hedges. Soft-winged as the owl is, he cannot steal in upon such
a retreat without giving them warning. These sparrows are
becoming about the most noticeable of my winter neighbors, and a troop of them
every morning watch me put out the hens' feed, and soon claim their share. I
rather encouraged them in their neighborliness, till one day I discovered the
snow under a favorite plum-tree where they most frequently perched covered with
the scales of the fruit-buds. On investigating, I found that the tree had been
nearly stripped of its buds, — a very unneighborly act on the part of the
sparrows, considering, too, all the cracked corn I had scattered for them. So I
at once served notice on them that our good understanding was at an end. And a
hint is as good as a kick with this bird. The stone I hurled among them, and
the one with which I followed them up, may have been taken as a kick; but they
were only a hint of the shotgun that stood ready in the corner. The sparrows
left in high dudgeon, and were not back again in some (lays, and were then very
shy. No doubt the time is near at hand when we shall have to wage serious war
upon these sparrows, as they long have had to do on the continent of Europe.
And yet it will be hard to kill the little wretches, the only Old World bird we
have. When I take down my gun to shoot them I shall probably remember that the
Psalmist said, “I watch, and am as a sparrow alone upon the housetop,” and
maybe the recollection will cause me to stay my hand. The sparrows have the Old
World hardiness and prolificness; they are wise and tenacious of life, and we
shall find it by and by no small matter to keep them in check. Our native birds
are much different, less prolific, less shrewd, less aggressive and persistent,
less quick-witted and able to read the note of danger or hostility, — in short,
less sophisticated. Most of our birds are yet essentially wild, that is, little
changed by civilization. In winter, especially, they sweep by me and around me
in flocks, — the Canada sparrow, the snow bunting, the shore lark, the pine
grosbeak, the redpoll, the cedar-bird, — feeding upon frozen apples in the
orchard, upon cedar-berries, upon maple-buds, and the berries of the
mountain-ash, and the celtis, and upon the seeds of the weeds that rise above
the snow in the field, or upon the hayseed dropped where the cattle have been
foddered in the barnyard or about the distant stack; but yet taking no heed of
man, in no way changing their habits so as to take advantage of his presence in
nature. The pine grosbeaks will come in numbers upon your porch to get the
black drupes of the honeysuckle or the woodbine, or within reach of your
windows to get the berries of the mountain-ash, but they know you not; they look
at you as innocently and unconcernedly as at a bear or moose in their native
north, and your house is no more to them than a ledge of rocks. The only ones of my
winter neighbors that actually rap at my door are the nuthatches and
woodpeckers, and these do not know that it is my door. My retreat is covered
with the bark of young chestnut-trees, and the birds, I suspect, mistake it for
a huge stump that ought to hold fat grubs (there is not even a book-worm inside
of it), and their loud rapping often makes me think I have a caller indeed. I
place fragments of hickory-nuts in the interstices of the bark, and thus
attract the nuthatches; a bone upon my window-sill attracts both nuthatches and
the downy woodpecker. They peep in curiously through the window upon me,
pecking away at my bone, too often a very poor one. A bone nailed to a tree a
few feet in front of the window attracts crows as well as lesser birds. Even
the slate-colored snowbird, a seed-eater, comes and nibbles it occasionally. The bird that seems
to consider he has the best right to the bone both upon the tree and upon the
sill is the downy woodpecker, my favorite neighbor among the winter birds, to
whom I will mainly devote the remainder of this chapter. His retreat is but a
few paces from my own, in the decayed limb of an apple-tree which he excavated
several autumns ago. I say “he” because the red plume on the top of his head
proclaims the sex. It seems not to be generally known to our writers upon
ornithology that certain of our woodpeckers — probably all the winter residents
— each fall excavate .a limb or the trunk of a tree in which to pass the
winter, and that the cavity is abandoned in the spring, probably for a new one
in which nidification takes place. So far as I have observed, these cavities
are drilled out only by the males. Where the females take up their quarters I
am not so well informed, though I suspect that they use the abandoned holes of
the males of the previous year. The particular
woodpecker to which I refer drilled his first hole in my apple-tree one fall
four or five years ago. This he occupied till the following spring, when he
abandoned it. The next fall he began a hole in an adjoining limb, later than
before, and when it was about half completed a female took possession of his
old quarters. I am sorry to say that this seemed to enrage the male very much,
and he persecuted the poor bird whenever she appeared upon the scene. He would
fly at her spitefully and drive her off. One chilly November morning, as I
passed under the tree, I heard the hammer of the little architect in his
cavity, and at the same time saw the persecuted female sitting at the entrance
of the other hole as if she would fain come out. She was actually shivering,
probably from both fear and cold. I understood the situation at a glance; the
bird was afraid to come forth and brave the anger of the male. Not till I had
rapped smartly upon the limb with my stick did she come out and attempt to
escape; but she had not gone ten feet from the tree before the male was in hot
pursuit, and in a few moments had driven her back to the same tree, where she
tried to avoid him among the branches. A few days after, he rid himself of his
unwelcome neighbor in the following ingenious manner: he fairly scuttled the
other cavity; he drilled a hole into the bottom of it that let in the light and
the cold, and I saw the female there no more. I did not see him in the act of
rendering this tenement uninhabitable; but one morning, behold it was punctured
at the bottom, and the circumstances all seemed to point to him as the author
of it. There is probably no gallantry among the birds except at the mating
season. I have frequently seen the male woodpecker drive the female away from
the bone upon the tree. When she hopped around to the other end and timidly
nibbled it, he would presently dart spitefully at her. She would then take up
her position in his rear and wait till he had finished his meal. The position
of the female among the birds is very much the same as that of woman among savage
tribes. Most of the drudgery of life falls upon her, and the leavings of the
males are often her lot. My bird is a
genuine little savage, doubtless, but I value him as a neighbor. It is a
satisfaction during the cold or stormy winter nights to know he is warm and
cozy there in his retreat. When the day is bad and unfit to be abroad in, he is
there too. When I wish to know if he is at home, I go and rap upon his tree,
and, if he is not too lazy or indifferent, after some delay he shows his head
in his round doorway about ten feet above, and looks down inquiringly upon me,
— sometimes latterly I think half resentfully, as much as to say, “I would
thank you not to disturb me so often.” After sundown, he will not put his head
out any more when I call, but as I step away I can get a glimpse of him inside
looking cold and reserved. He is a late riser, especially if it is a cold or
disagreeable morning, in this respect being like the barn fowls; it is
sometimes near nine o'clock before I see him leave his tree. On the other hand,
he comes home early, being in, if the day is unpleasant, by four P. M. He lives
all alone; in this respect I do not commend his example. Where his mate is, I
should like to know. I have discovered
several other woodpeckers in adjoining orchards, each of which has a like home,
and leads a like solitary life. One of them has excavated a dry limb within
easy reach of my hand, doing the work also in September. But the choice of tree
was not a good one; the limb was too much decayed, and the workman had made the
cavity too large; a chip had come out, making a hole in the outer wall. Then he
went a few inches down the limb and began again, and excavated a large,
commodious chamber, but had again come too near the surface; scarcely more than
the bark protected him in one place, and the limb was very much weakened. Then
he made another attempt still farther down the limb, and drilled in an inch or
two, but seemed to change his mind; the work stopped, and I concluded the bird
had wisely abandoned the tree. Passing there one cold, rainy November day, I
thrust in my two fingers and was surprised to feel something soft and warm: as
I drew away my hand the bird came out, apparently no more surprised than I was.
It had decided, then, to make its home in the old limb; a decision it had
occasion to regret, for not long after, on a stormy night, the branch gave way
and fell to the ground: “When the bough
breaks the cradle will fall,
And down will come baby, cradle and all.” Such a cavity makes
a snug, warm home, and when the entrance is on the under side of the limb, as
is usual, the wind and snow cannot reach the occupant. Late in December, while
crossing a high, wooded mountain, lured by the music of foxhounds, I discovered
fresh yellow chips strewing the new-fallen snow, and at once thought of my
woodpeckers. On looking around I saw where one had been at work excavating a
lodge in a small yellow birch. The orifice was about fifteen feet from the
ground, and appeared as round as if struck with a compass. It was on the east
side of the tree, so as to avoid the prevailing west and northwest winds. As it
was nearly two inches in diameter, it could not have been the work of the
downy, but must have been that of the hairy, or else the yellow-bellied
woodpecker. His home had probably been wrecked by some violent wind, and he was
thus providing himself another. In digging out these retreats the woodpeckers
prefer a dry, brittle trunk, not too soft. They go in horizontally to the
centre and then turn downward, enlarging the tunnel as they go, till when
finished it is the shape of a long, deep pear. Another trait our
woodpeckers have that endears them to me, and that has never been pointedly
noticed by our ornithologists, is their habit of drumming in the spring. They
are songless birds, and yet all are musicians; they make the dry limbs eloquent
of the coming change. Did you think that loud, sonorous hammering which
proceeded from the orchard or from the near woods on that still March or April
morning was only some bird getting its breakfast? It is downy, but he is not
rapping at the door of a grub; he is rapping at the door of spring, and the dry
limb thrills beneath the ardor of his blows. Or, later in the season, in the
dense forest or by some remote mountain lake, does that measured rhythmic beat
that breaks upon the silence, first three strokes following each other rapidly,
succeeded by two louder ones with longer intervals between them, and that has
an effect upon the alert ear as if the solitude itself had at last found a
voice, — does that suggest anything less than a deliberate musical performance?
In fact, our woodpeckers are just as characteristically drummers as is the
ruffed grouse, and they have their particular limbs and stubs to which they
resort for that purpose. Their need of expression is apparently just as great
as that of the song-birds, and it is not surprising that they should have found
out that there is music in a dry, seasoned limb which can be evoked beneath
their beaks. A few seasons ago,
a downy woodpecker, probably the individual one who is now my winter neighbor,
began to drum early in March in a partly decayed apple-tree that stands in the
edge of a narrow strip of woodland near me. When the morning was still and mild
I would often hear him through my window before I was up, or by half-past six
o'clock, and he would keep it up pretty briskly till nine or ten o'clock, in
this respect resembling the grouse, which do most of their drumming in the
forenoon. His drum was the stub of a dry limb about the size of one's wrist.
The heart was decayed and gone, but the outer shell was hard and resonant. The
bird would keep his position there for an hour at a time. Between his drummings
he would preen his plumage and listen as if for the response of the female, or
for the drum of some rival. How swift his head would go when he was delivering
his blows upon the limb! His beak wore the surface perceptibly. When he wished
to change the key, which was quite often, he would shift his position an inch
or two to a knot which gave out a higher, shriller note. When I climbed up to
examine his drum he was much disturbed. I did not know he was in the vicinity,
but it seems he saw me from a near tree, and came in haste to the neighboring
branches, and with spread plumage and a sharp note demanded plainly enough what
my business was with his drum. I was invading his privacy, desecrating his
shrine, and the bird was much put out. After some weeks the female appeared; he
had literally drummed up a mate; his urgent and oft-repeated advertisement was
answered. Still the drumming did not cease, but was quite as fervent as before.
If a mate could be won by drumming, she could be kept and entertained by more
drumming; courtship should not end with marriage. If the bird felt musical
before, of course he felt much more so now. Besides that, the gentle deities
needed propitiating in behalf of the nest and young as well as in behalf of the
mate. After a time a second female came, when there was war between the two. I
did not see them come to blows, but I saw one female pursuing the other about
the place, and giving her no rest for several days. She was evidently trying to
run her out of the neighborhood. Now and then, she, too, would drum briefly, as
if sending a triumphant message to her mate. The woodpeckers do
not each have a particular dry limb to which they resort at all times to drum,
like the one I have described. The woods are full of suitable branches, and
they drum more or less here and there as they are in quest of food; yet I am
convinced each one has its favorite spot, like the grouse, to which it resorts
especially in the morning. The sugar-maker in the maple-woods may notice that
this sound proceeds from the same tree or trees about his camp with great
regularity. A woodpecker in my
vicinity has drummed for two seasons on a telegraph pole, and he makes the
wires and glass insulators ring. Another drums on a thin board on the end of a
long grape-arbor, and on still mornings can be heard a long distance. A friend of mine in a Southern city tells me of a red-headed
woodpecker that drums upon a lightning-rod on his neighbor's house. Nearly
every clear, still morning at certain seasons, he says, this musical rapping
may be heard. “He alternates his tapping with his stridulous call, and the
effect on a cool, autumn-like morning is very pleasing.” The high-hole
appears to drum more promiscuously than does downy. He utters his long, loud
spring call, whick — whick — whick — whick,
and then begins to rap with his beak upon his perch before the last note has
reached your ear. I have seen him drum sitting upon the ridge of the barn. The
log-cock, or pileated woodpecker, the largest and wildest of our Northern
species, I have never heard drum. His blows should wake the echoes. When the woodpecker
is searching for food, or laying siege to some hidden grub, the sound of his
hammer is dead or muffled, and is heard but a few yards. It is only upon dry,
seasoned timber, freed of its bark, that he beats his reveille to spring and
wooes his mate. Wilson was
evidently familiar with this vernal drumming of the woodpeckers, but quite
misinterprets it. Speaking of the red-bellied species, he says: “It rattles
like the rest of the tribe on the dead limbs, and with such violence as to be
heard in still weather more than half a mile off; and listens to hear the
insect it has alarmed.” He listens rather to hear the drum of his rival, or the
brief and coy response of the female; for there are no insects in these dry
limbs. On one occasion I
saw downy at his drum when a female flew quickly through the tree and alighted
a few yards beyond him. He paused instantly, and kept his place apparently
without moving a muscle. The female, I took it, had answered his advertisement.
She flitted about from limb to limb (the female may be known by the absence of
the crimson spot on the back of the head), apparently full of business of her
own, and now and then would drum in a shy, tentative manner. The male watched
her a few moments, and, convinced perhaps that she meant business, struck up
his liveliest tune, then listened for her response. As it came back timidly but
promptly, he left his perch and sought a nearer acquaintance with the prudent
female. Whether or not a match grew out of this little flirtation I cannot say.
The downy
woodpeckers are sometimes accused of injuring the apple and other fruit trees,
but the depredator is probably the larger and rarer yellow-bellied species. One
autumn I caught one of these fellows in the act of sinking long rows of his
little wells in the limb of an apple-tree. There were series of rings of them,
one above another, quite around the stem, some of them the third of an inch
across. They are evidently made to get at the tender, juicy bark, or cambium
layer, next to the hard wood of the tree. The health and vitality of the branch
are so seriously impaired by them that it often dies. In the following
winter the same bird (probably) tapped a maple-tree in front of my window in
fifty six places; and when the day was sunny, and the sap oozed out, he spent
most of his time there. He knew the good sap-days, and was on hand promptly for
his tipple; cold and cloudy days he did not appear. He knew which side of the
tree to tap, too, and avoided the sunless northern exposure. When one series of
well-holes failed to supply him, he would sink another, drilling through the
bark with great ease and quickness. Then, when the day was warm, and the sap
ran freely, he would have a regular sugar-maple debauch, sitting there by his
wells hour after hour, and as fast as they became filled sipping out the sap.
This he did in a gentle, caressing manner that was very suggestive. He made a
row of wells near the foot of the tree, and other rows higher up, and he would
hop up and down the trunk as these became filled. He would hop down the tree
backward with the utmost ease, throwing his tail outward and his head inward at
each hop. When the wells would freeze up or his thirst become slaked, he would
ruffle his feathers, draw himself together, and sit and doze in the sun on the
side of the tree. He passed the night in a hole in an apple-tree not far off.
He was evidently a young bird, not yet having the plumage of the mature male or
female, and yet he knew which tree to tap and where to tap it. I saw where he
had bored several maples in the vicinity, but no oaks or chestnuts. I nailed up
a fat bone near his sap-works: the downy woodpecker came there several times a
day to dine; the nuthatch came, and even the snowbird took a taste
occasionally; but this sapsucker never touched it; the sweet of the tree
sufficed for him. This woodpecker does not breed or abound in my vicinity; only
stray specimens are now and then to be met with in the colder months. As spring
approached, the one I refer to took his departure. I must bring my
account of my neighbor in the tree down to the latest date; so after the lapse
of a year I add the following notes. The last day of February was bright and
spring-like. I heard the first sparrow sing that morning and the first
screaming of the circling hawks, and about seven o'clock the first drumming of
my little friend. His first notes were uncertain and at long intervals, but by
and by he warmed up and beat a lively tattoo. As the season advanced he ceased
to lodge in his old quarters. I would rap and find nobody at home. Was he out
on a lark, I said, the spring fever working in his blood? After a time his
drumming grew less frequent, and finally, in the middle of April, ceased
entirely. Had some accident befallen him, or had he wandered away to fresh
fields, following some siren of his species? Probably the latter. Another bird
that I had under observation also left his winter-quarters in the spring. This,
then, appears to be the usual custom. The wrens and the nuthatches and chickadees
succeed to these abandoned cavities, and often have amusing disputes over them.
The nuthatches frequently pass the night in them, and the wrens and chickadees
nest in them. I have further observed that in excavating a cavity for a nest
the downy woodpecker makes the entrance smaller than when he is excavating his
winter-quarters. This is doubtless for the greater safety of the young birds. The next fall the
downy excavated another limb in the old apple-tree, but had not got his retreat
quite finished when the large hairy woodpecker appeared upon the scene. I heard
his loud click, click, early one
frosty November morning. There was something impatient and angry in the tone
that arrested my attention. I saw the bird fly to the tree where downy had been
at work, and fall with great violence upon the entrance to his cavity. The bark
and the chips flew beneath his vigorous blows, and, before I fairly woke up to
what he was doing, he had completely demolished the neat, round doorway of
downy. He had made a large, ragged opening, large enough for himself to enter.
I drove him away and my favorite came back, but only to survey the ruins of his
castle for a moment and then go away. He lingered about for a day or two and
then disappeared. The big hairy usurper passed a night in the cavity; but on
being hustled out of it — the next night by me, he also left, but not till he
had demolished the entrance to a cavity in a neighboring tree where downy and
his mate had reared their brood that summer, and where I had hoped the female
would pass the winter. |