Gulf News

The solace of birds on winter days

- Margaret Renkl ■ Margaret Renkl is a contributi­ng opinion writer who covers flora, fauna, politics and culture in the American South.

When I search for comfort in the face of so many 21stcentur­y dangers — to democracy in the age of fake news, to the natural world in the age of climate change — I don’t normally think of winter as offering much in the way of consolatio­n.

Many of the most interestin­g creatures have gone to ground now. The cheery chipmunks are asleep in their tunnels beneath my house [in Nashville, Tennessee, US]. The queen bumblebees have made themselves a little sleeping chamber deep in the soil of my garden. Somewhere nearby, the resident rat snake is also sleeping undergroun­d, and, at the park, the snapping turtles and bullfrogs have settled themselves into the mud at the bottom of the lake.

All the loveliest insects are gone now, too. The honeybees are huddled up in their hives, vibrating their wings to keep warm and feeding on the honey. The monarch butterflie­s have long since migrated to their Mexican wintering grounds. My flower beds are nothing but a jumble of dried stems and matted clumps, a collection of dead vegetation.

Winter can be the best time of year for backyard birdwatchi­ng. The mockingbir­ds are finally interested in the suet balls they disdained all summer, and the gorgeous blue jays, their bright colours even bluer against the sepia backdrop of winter, carry away the unshelled nuts I set along the deck rail for squirrels. The tiny dark-eyed juncos that spent all summer in the Far North are back now, hopping around in the leaf litter, picking up the safflower seeds the tufted titmice push out of the feeder in their search for the sunflower seeds they prefer.

Now the downy woodpecker­s, with their striped wings and their tidy red caps, come and go from the peanut feeder. They swoop to their feast with the characteri­stic undulating flight of their kind.

On especially cold mornings, when bitter temperatur­es overnight have frozen all the puddles, every songbird in Middle Tennessee, it seems, comes to my back deck to enjoy the heated birdbath. One morning last week I looked out the window and saw six bluebirds gathered in a ring around the edge of it, dipping their beaks into the bowl over and over again while the air above the heated water puffed into fog in the cold.

In winter the neighbourh­ood hawk sits still in the bare branches of trees, a perch where she is invisible to me at any other time of year. Now I can see even the claws on her great yellow feet extending beyond the fluffed feathers she has drawn around them. The neighbourh­ood crows know very well that she is there, and they have a few furious words for her as she waits, calmly surveying them as they swoop around her head, close but not too close.

Despite their legendary intelligen­ce, I have my issues with crows. Opportunis­tic omnivores, they will poach the young from songbird nests. In the spring and fall migrations, they will even devour the exhausted songbirds themselves. But in winter, the crows become my favourites again. They are perfectly designed for this season, black against a grey sky, a three-dimensiona­l silhouette. Unlike other birds, crows continue to speak to one another throughout the coldest days. American crows remain together as a family through the seasons. I stand in my yard and watch them grooming one another in the high branches.

Sometimes they simply sit in the branches and call out, one to another, deep in conversati­on, a talk that continues even as they fly toward their roost in the last light of these short days. I don’t know what they are saying, but I like to listen in anyway. It’s a gift to watch them living their intricate lives so visibly now that the trees are bare again. This is their world, though it overlaps with mine.

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