Visiting Varied Thrushes

Fri, Dec 26, 2008

Birds

Visiting Varied Thrushes

The unmistakable calls from a flock of varied thrushes lured me outside this morning. Their bright orange coloring adds some cheer to the mostly white landscape. Contrasting nicely, their dark blue top feathers glow in the gentle light. Most of the year the thrushes live at higher elevations, but especially now with so much snow in the mountains, they lower themselves to sea level for better foraging. They are old friends who drop by during the holidays (and who’d never dare to bring fruitcake!).

Varied thrush sings about winter

Varied thrush sings about winter

Here’s a real treat: listen to the varied thrush from this episode of Bird Notes, created by Seattle Audubon.

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To pass the dark month of December with an old friend, here is today’s green meditation, courtesy of Henry Thoreau.

For sounds in winter nights, and often in winter days, I heard the forlorn but melodious note of a hooting owl indefinitely far; such a sound as the frozen earth would yield if struck with a suitable plectrum, the very lingua vernacula of Walden Wood, and quite familiar to me at last, though I never saw the bird while it was making it. I seldom opened my door in a winter evening without hearing it; Hoo hoo hoo, hoorer, hoo, sounded sonorously, and the first three syllables accented somewhat like how der do; or sometimes hoo, hoo only.

One night in the beginning of winter, before the pond froze over, about nine o’clock, I was startled by the loud honking of a goose, and, stepping to the door, heard the sound of their wings like a tempest in the woods as they flew low over my house. They passed over the pond toward Fair Haven, seemingly deterred from settling by my light, their commodore honking all the while with a regular beat.

Suddenly an unmistakable cat-owl from very near me, with the most harsh and tremendous voice I ever heard from any inhabitant of the woods, responded at regular intervals to the goose, as if determined to expose and disgrace this intruder from Hudson’s Bay by exhibiting a greater compass and volume of voice in a native, and boo-hoo him out of Concord horizon. What do you mean by alarming the citadel at this time of night consecrated to me? Do you think I am ever caught napping at such an hour, and that I have not got lungs and a larynx as well as yourself? Boo-hoo, boo-hoo, boo-hoo! It was one of the most thrilling discords I ever heard. And yet, if you had a discriminating ear, there were in it the elements of a concord such as these plains never saw nor heard.

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