HART BEAT: MY, HOW BIRDING HAS CHANGED

Northern Mockingbird

Northern Mockingbird

A Hart Beat reader commented after the last column that he was surprised to learn that there were no Red-bellied Woodpeckers in Pennsylvania when I began birdwatching as a Boy Scout back in the 1940s. That got me thinking about all the other changes that have occurred in these intervening years.

To begin with, the temperatures have changed dramatically. For example, back then when I was a boy, we would begin ice-skating on a local pond in the town park shortly after Thanksgiving and ice-skate there every day all winter long until late February or early March. The local fire company would periodically spray fresh water on the pond to provide a smooth surface once again. Now, that same pond seldom even gets a skim of thin ice on it and there has not been any ice-skating there or any other outside body of water in my Pennsylvania home area for as long as I can remember. It only makes sense that with the warming weather many bird species have expanded their ranges north.

Besides the Red-bellied Woodpecker which first appeared in Pennsylvania sometime in the late 1950s, I saw my first Northern Mockingbird (top of page) in 1951 on a visit to the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Yes, there were no Northern Mockingbirds in Pennsylvania in those days. Northern Cardinals (photo 2), which now often appear eight or 10 at a time at our feeders, were quite an uncommon but very welcome sight. Southern birds have expanded their territories north. In a way, the reverse is also true. Every winter we would see some bird species such as Northern Shrikes, Goshawks, White-winged and Red Crossbills, and Evening Grosbeaks. (All bird species we saw before I was into photography and spending my winters in Florida!) Now those same species are rarely seen in the winters.

Other bird species that were extremely rare have recovered well as a result of strong efforts to bring them back. I remember my excitement when I saw my first Osprey (photo 3) at the New Jersey shore in the early 1950s, initially mistakenly thinking it was my first Bald Eagle (photo 4) which I subsequently saw at Hawk Mountain on the Kittatinny Ridge an hour north of our Pennsylvania home. And my first ever Wild Turkey (photo 5) was on a field trip to the Quabbin Reservoir in Massachusetts in the early 1970s. Now, all three species occur regularly on our Pennsylvania farm, and of course, all three are now common in Florida.

Another significant change has been the diminished numbers of some species. When I was a teenager there were at least five different locations in my hometown where one could find Barn Owls (photo 6). There was a feed mill in a nearby town where Barn Owls nested in plain sight and were accustomed to birders coming to watch them raise their chicks year after year. Today, I am told by knowledgeable birders that there is not a single known Barn Owl location anywhere in my home Pennsylvania county, which is larger than St Lucie, Martin and Indian River counties combined.

Perhaps the saddest change has been the reduction of the number of birds in many species, but most glaring has been the reduction of the numbers of warblers passing through every spring on their way north to breed. We would look forward to the four or five times during each northern migration when we would observe a “warbler wave,” those times when the weather conditions combined to send literally thousands of warblers in virtually every imaginable species through our area. The trees would be dripping with warblers; we would be watching one warbler while three or four or more would pass right through our binocular fields. It was not uncommon on such days to record as many as 22 to 24 species of warblers in a matter of an hour or two, including such unusual species as Mourning Warblers (photo 7). I have never experienced such a “warbler wave” as an adult. Today birders get excited if they see 15 species of warblers in a day and then generally only one or two birds of each species.

Birding itself has also changed. My birder Scoutmaster, who got me into the sport, and I were the only birders either one of us knew. Bird feeders had to be built and were rare; There were no bird feed stores or bags of bird seed in supermarkets, no birding hot-lines and, of course, no computers, much less an internet from which to glean birding information. Peterson’s bird book with its few bird paintings and mostly line drawings of the different species was the only available guide.

Life itself is constantly changing and hopefully improving as it evolves. But while things in many areas are definitely getting better, there are also areas where they are also getting worse. Think global warming.

But it is the constant change that makes life interesting and the uncertainty of what the future holds in store for us that keeps us looking ahead. I know my life and the world around me have taken many significant twists and turns in my 89 years. I can only dream of what new discoveries and improvements will be made in the coming years, many of which we can’t even comprehend.

I write this column on a computer which I, as a youngster could never even have imagined, and I now carry in my pocket a smart phone that has more computing power than existed for the astronauts on their first trip to the moon. The birds are similarly adjusting, changing their migration patterns and extending and reducing their ranges as climate changes dictate. It will be interesting to see what the future holds for birds and birding as well. Maybe some day in the long distant future birds will rise up and dominate the world. Birders should be in a unique position to watch that takeover occur. So, keep on the lookout and always have your binoculars ready. Another reason to keep watching birds!

HART BEAT: RED-HEADED OR RED BELLIED?

Red-headed Woodpecker

Red-headed Woodpecker

“We have a Red-headed Woodpecker coming to our feeders.” (Top) The speaker was a long-time friend who, like so many other new birders, has discovered the joy of the sport because of being housebound throughout the Covid pandemic. I know from many past instances that new birders and non-birders alike often believe that Red-bellied Woodpeckers are Red-headed Woodpeckers because they have a considerable amount of red on their heads (Photo 2, a female Red-bellied displaying the small patch of red on the belly that gives the species its name).  

Consequently, when a new birder or non-birder claims they saw a Red-headed Woodpecker, I ask the question “What color was the back of the bird?” If they say it was black and white, I congratulate them for they have indeed seen a Red-headed Woodpecker, as was the case with my friend (Photo 3 on their favorite food, unsalted shelled peanuts) If they answer that the back of the bird was striped, then I correct them and explain the differences between the two species (Photo 4, another female Red-bellied). Of course there are other differences as well: Red-headed have silver bills with a black tip, while Red-bellied have an all-black bill.  

Even more obvious is the all-red head of the Red-headed Woodpecker compared to the brown cheeks and side of the face of Red-bellied Woodpeckers. While both male and female Red-headed look alike, Red-bellied males and females differ in that in females the red only extends half-way up to the top of the head while the forehead of the female is then light brown. In male Red-bellied the red extends all the way across the top of the head right down to the bill (Photo 5).

When a Red-headed Woodpecker takes flight it displays the pristine white of its underside. Red-bellied Woodpeckers have a light-colored underside, but it appears rather dingy by comparison (Photo 6). Juvenile Red-bellied do not have any red on their heads whatsoever (Photo 7). Regrettably I do not have a photo of a juvenile Red-headed Woodpecker, which would show an all-brown head that will subsequently become all red, to share with you.  

Red-bellied Woodpeckers are more common in both our Florida and Pennsylvania home areas. This was not always the case. When I first began birding back in the 1940s there were no Red-bellied Woodpeckers anywhere in Pennsylvania. I remember my excitement when we found our first, then exceedingly rare, Red-bellied Woodpecker during a Christmas Bird Count sometime in the late 1950s. Since that time, they have proliferated to the point where they are now among the most common birds coming year-round to our Pennsylvania feeders. In Florida they have been quite common for as long as I can remember.  

Conversely, Red-headed Woodpeckers are still an uncommon bird to find in either Florida or Pennsylvania which accounts for the excitement among birders when a nesting location for a pair is found. Fortunately for St Lucie Audubon, Red-headed Woodpeckers are found just about every year on the Joe Overstreet Road field trip. The Red-headed Woodpecker depicted at our peanut feeder in photo 3 remained at our Pennsylvania property for about a month in June 2013 during which time it would sing its heart out all day apparently trying to attract a mate. We never saw a second bird and assume that it moved on to greener pastures.

 While it’s understandable that an inexperienced non-birder might think a Red-bellied Woodpecker is a Red-headed, once novice birders begin to become more familiar with the birds in their home area, they quickly learn the difference between these two species. As new birders become more involved in birding, after learning all the shorebirds and peeps, all the different warblers, both spring and fall plumages, all the herons and egrets, they can then move on to the “look-alike” birds such as Hairy and Downy Woodpeckers, Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs, Cooper’s and Sharp-shinned Hawks, or among the ducks, Greater and Lesser Scaup.

 And when they become even more accomplished, they can tackle difficult bird species that are almost indistinguishable such as the Empidonax Flycatchers, particularly the Willow and Alder Flycatchers, species which even the most accomplished ornithologists have difficulty identifying if they are not singing.

 Yes, birding can become as intense a sport as the birder wants to make it, and in any event, casual or intense, it is always a great deal of fun. Interestingly though, while we may have difficulty distinguishing some of these different species, the birds themselves don’t seem to have any problems whatsoever. I suppose among the birds it’s like the way we humans don’t have any problems identifying one another, even with individuals who strongly resemble each other. But I don’t want to get into the similarities between bird interactions and human interactions. That would take a whole book.

HART BEAT: GRACKLES

“Come look at these birds, I think they might be Boat-tailed Grackles.”

If we were in Florida Boat-tailed Grackles in the back yard would be very much expected, but we were at our farm in Pennsylvania and Boat-tailed Grackles are never expected this far from Atlantic coastal sites where they are still not nearly as common as they are in Florida.

As I write this column I no longer remember what stupid mundane activity I was engaged in at the time, but instead of rushing to the kitchen window to check out the birds I simply replied, “What color are their eyes?” Jewel replied, “They have yellow eyes.”  I dismissively replied, “Boat-tailed Grackles have brown eyes.” “But these appear to definitely be larger than the Common Grackles right next to them and they certainly seem to have larger tails.”

Then her next words ended the discussion, “Never mind, they just flew.” It turns out there were four of the birds in question present, and only later did I check and learn to my chagrin that the mid-Atlantic coastal sub-species of Boat-tailed Grackles do indeed have yellow eyes.

 Boat-tailed Grackles, particularly when displaying and trying to outdo their fellow competitors for the attention of nearby females (top), are quite striking and more colorful than Common Grackles. With shimmering glossy blue plumage and distinctive brown eyes (in the Florida sub-species, photo 2) they are stunning. Female Boat-tailed Grackles, (photo 3) on the other hand, are brown.

On a boat trip up the Oklawaha River to the Rodman Dam near Palatka a number of years ago, we encountered a leucistic Boat-Tailed Grackle (photo 4) which was an interesting bird to find. On another occasion at Green Cay Wetlands in Boynton Beach we observed the entire procedure from the female signaling that she was ready for mating all the way through to the actual copulation and the male simply flying off when the act was completed (photo 5).

         Common Grackles (photo 6) are smaller (12.5” to 16.5”) than Boat-tailed Grackles, have a shorter wing-span (17” to 23”) and are not as deep blue in color. Female Common Grackles (photo 7) are even less colorful, only having iridescence on their heads and necks. When I first began birding back in the 1940’s Grackles were considered to be two separate species: Purple Grackles and Bronzed Grackles. Bronzed Grackles (photo 8, found at the Home Depot parking lot in Fort Pierce, Florida) were hard to find back then and are still uncommon although they apparently are more readily found in the mid-west. Young Common Grackles (photo 9, being fed by a parent) like so many young blackbird-type species, are all brown and quite nondescript.

Jewel has cautioned me that she still is not at all certain whether the birds were Boat-tailed or Common Grackles. Whether or not we had our first ever Boat-tailed Grackles at our feeders in Pennsylvania will forever remain an uncertainty and a mystery. Indeed, whatever they were, they have never returned. But one very important lesson was learned from the experience: from now on whenever Jewel says “Come look at these birds,” I will stop whatever activity I am engaged in and will get myself quickly to wherever she is to see what she is referring to.

In fact, quickly responding to her call “Come here” is something you think I would have learned a long time ago regardless of whatever the situation may be. This is not something in the “teaching old dogs new tricks category,” I’m pretty sure it was somewhere in the wedding vows. Wasn’t there something about “obey” in there?

For more information on Boat-tailed Grackles, see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boat-tailed_grackle

For more information on Common Grackles, see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_grackle