Bird is the Word
Adventures from the Audubon Xmas bird count. WRITTEN & ILLUSTRATED & ANIMATED & SPOKEN by PETER MOORE (quadruple threat)
In addition to my light-hearted labors here on substack, I’m also a commentator and animator for KUNC, the NPR affiliate for Colorado’s Front Range, and extending all the way west to Grand Junction. I might be audible all the way to Utah, and they need me!
I executed this logo-animation for KUNC, just to remind everybody that if there’s no love, there’s nothing worth talking about. Click here to hear my voice, and avoid arduously reading my bird-brained ramblings.
Just remember, the spoken voice is a lousy cartoonist. Bonus images below!
MY BEST BIRDING MOMENT–perhaps my only really good one–came in Sedona, Ariz., as I stood on a trail next to Rock Creek, waiting for our guide to locate some birds for us. I was staring off into space, as usual, when I locked eyes with a very large owl. I hissed, “That is one giant bird!” Our guide came running and looked at me with amazement. I was the blind dog who somehow found a bone. Then she exclaimed, “It’s a Mexican spotted owl! Very rare in these parts!”
A day later I was asking a ranger about bird-watching spots in Sedona. “You should go down to Rock Creek,” she said. “Somebody saw a Mexican spotted owl yesterday!”
On the basis of that, I can declare: I am somebody!
Why do people watch birds, anyway? Well, clearly, they’re not going to watch themselves. But I do it for a lot of reasons. First of all, birds are the descendants of dinosaurs–or vice versa–which I know from watching the Jurassic Park movies. Birds are velociraptors with wings; there’s no telling what they might do next!
Also, they have cool names. Consider the Lapland Longspur. Or the Bohemian Waxwing. Or the Blue-throated Mountain Gem. You can see each of these birds in our fine state. You just have to stare through binoculars until your eyes bleed.
Which is what half a dozen of your neighbors and I were doing last Saturday, as we gathered in Rolland Moore Park in Fort Collins, to do our part for the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. It’s just like our national census, only with citizens who fly around, hide in shrubbery, and duck under the water while you’re trying to count them.
As soon as I left my warm car that morning, I spotted a decoy coyote on the park’s ballfields. Not everybody loves Canada geese–especially outfielders. Stepping in poop is a synonym for luck, but it doesn’t work that way in baseball.
We hadn’t been bird-counting for more than three minutes when I spotted a pair of lusty mallards attempting to make even more mallards in the chilly waters of Spring Creek. If that ain’t love, what is? No wonder that species succeeds so well.
We continued our walk in the park, and shouted out improbable IDs of far-distant avians. That’s when one of my fellow bird counters shared a concept called “bird desire.” No, not the kind Mr. and Mrs. Mallard demonstrated. Instead, it is the eagerness of every birder to see something rare–for instance, a Mexican Spotted Owl, to cite one awesomely impressive example. I tried to turn black crows into golden eagles, and leaves into Red-breasted Nuthatches. But hope is the thing with feathers, as the famous ornithologist Emily Dickinson told us.
We weren’t the only hopeful people out there, either. At least a dozen times, people stopped our birding group with the impertinent question: “Have you seen anything good?” Good how? Is a Cooper’s Hawk good? A Downy Woodpecker? Nobody seemed particularly impressed with our high-flying haul, even though we clocked thirty species with our eagle eyes.
Even our group had to discipline itself not to say things like, “Oh, it’s just a common house finch.” Momma Finch didn’t feel that way when her egg hatched, and we shouldn’t either.
In fact, if you’re looking for a life lesson along with your bird count, this is it: There’s beauty everywhere. The slower you go, the closer you look, the more you see. A brush pile is a bird jewel box, the sky, their boundless ocean. And birds know a kind of freedom we humans can only dream about…unless we visit DIA. Even then we have to drive past Blucifer, the haunted stallion who stares with red eyes, reminding us that flying ain’t natural for the likes of us. But the birds do it, and our imaginations can take flight as well, if we just pay attention.
Late in the day we walked along Spring Creek again, and I spotted Mr. and Mrs. Mallard once more. Their beaks were curved into satisfied smiles. There will be more mallards during next year’s count, if the fake coyotes don’t get them.
“Be like the bird who, pausing in her flight awhile on boughs too slight, feels them give way beneath her, and yet sings, knowing she hath wings.”
—Victor Hugo
It’s nearly the new year. And you’re no doubt resolving: In 2025, I want to achieve Medici-levels of support for the arts!
Resolution, resolved!
Or just buy me a resolution hot beverage, to warm my drawing hands.
Many thanks for joining me here. It means the world to me.
Observing nature is one of my favorite things to do. Observing your sketches of nature is too!
Congratulations on spotting the Mexican spotted owl and especially on hearing about your own anonymous exploit from the ranger the next day. Your experience is maybe a step or two from Paul McCartney shopping at Food Lion and hearing Hey Jude (with interruptions about "customer assistance needed at produce" and so on). I'm sure it gets old for Paul. I'm old and don't expect ever to hear reports about myself, whether as an anonymous "somebody" or otherwise.