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Al's
Musings
Pileated
Ponderings
I was
leading a field trip.
The objective was to see birds.
I had a bone to pick with the day. The day had been one
of wall-to-wall rain. The weather had been miserable. The
day had been a series of downpours interrupted only briefly
by hope. The tattoo of raindrops on the roofs of the cars
had been our constant companion. If the day had a theme
song, it would have been, “Here Comes That Rainy Day
Feeling.”
A recollection from a mythology class taken during my Pleistocene
era caused me to blame Zeus, the god of weather. As the
rain refused to go away, the day lost its confident swagger.
There was no threat of mutiny, but there were no high-fives
either.
We stopped for a restroom break. It was a restroom made
for birders. Trees and water surrounded the building. I
chose the location because I’m a big believer in the
old saying, “If you gotta go, go somewhere nice.”
As folks waited their turns, I scanned the area for anything
avian. One of the best things about birds is that they are
everywhere. If we make the habit of looking, we will see.
Birds may be everywhere, but they don’t hang
around hoping to be seen. A bird should be considered a
flight risk.
Above the tops of the trees notching the leaden sky, I watched
a few starlings wheeling in harmony.
There was a Great Blue Heron, standing still as if frozen
to its reflection in the water. My father called them shitepokes
and marveled at their skill and patience while hunting.
I watched the heron until it captured a small fish for lunch.
It situated the fish in its bill so that it would go down
the gullet headfirst. The genius of birds. It’s never
a mistake to look at a bird. Then I heard the call. It sounded
almost like a flicker, but not quite. It was louder and
deeper.
I saw a large bird fly into a nearby tree. A Pileated Woodpecker!
The Pileated has a flight that is unusually deliberate for
a woodpecker.
Comparing its size to that of the much more common Downy
Woodpecker, the Downy weighs about an ounce, while the Pileated
weighs in at 10 to 16 ounces, putting it in the heavyweight
class of woodpeckers. Its loud “Kuk, kuk, kuk!”
call that rises and falls in pitch has earned it the nicknames
of “wood hen” and “cock of the woods.”
I quickly found the bird with my naked eyes and then added
my binoculars to reinforce the sighting. My binoculars became
Gandalf, magically placing the bird in my eyes. Seeing the
male bird with its red moustache was like looking at an
exquisite painting.
The Pileated uses its large beak to chisel sizable, rectangular
holes into sick or dead trees. The bird hits the wood like
a feathered jackhammer, making the chips fly. This has earned
it yet another nickname, the “carpenter bird.”
A woodpecker’s bill is anchored at the skull by a
thick bone that acts as a shock absorber while the bill
is propelled forward at 15 miles per hour. Its skull contains
a liquid membrane that surrounds the brain to protect it
from jarring. Men have something similar that protects us
when we fall asleep while watching TV.
The Pileated does a lot of drumming on hollow limbs in the
spring. It is a distinctive drumming, rather slow and loud
at the beginning and then softening as it nears the end.
The Pileated searches dead wood for carpenter ants that
make up to 60 percent of its diet. The bird uses a sticky,
barbed tongue to catch the ants. Scientists have found as
many as 2,600 ants in a single bird’s stomach.
The Pileated will eat beetles, grubs, moths, and flies.
Its diet also includes acorns, wild grapes, the seeds of
sumac, and the fruits of poison ivy, cherry, dogwood, and
Virginia creeper. Nesting holes are 15 to 80 feet above
the ground, often in a bleached and bonelike, dead tree
from which the bark has been stripped away. They prefer
a nest cavity facing east or south in order to catch the
warmth. American Kestrels, Wood Ducks, and Screech Owls
will use old Pileated nest sites. Three to 5 pure white
eggs are laid on a bed of chips. Both sexes incubate the
eggs for 18 days. When not occupying the nest, the male
often will entertain his mate by drumming on a nearby hollow
limb. The young are a noisy bunch and are fed regurgitated
insects in order to keep them quiet. This works as well
as feeding a hotdish to a Lutheran. The nestlings leave
the nest at 26-28 days of age
The crow-sized Pileated Woodpecker played that woodpecker
peek-a-boo with my eight-powered eyesight. It peered around
one side of the tree and then the other.
As a boy, I was told that there are two kinds of people
in the world. There are those who walk into a room and say,
“Here I am.” Then there are those who walk into
a room and say, “There you are.” I was told
to strive to be a member of the latter group.
Seeing the Pileated, I could almost hear the bird saying,
“There you are.”
I have always loved woodpeckers. My mother told her children
that they could become whatever they wanted to be. I decided
I was going to become a woodpecker. It seemed to be a noble
calling. I received all kinds of advice from the older children.
One told me that I needed to practice. I whined in response
that I was not going to jump off the roof of the house again.
It had taken my broken leg forever to heel.
My helpful advisor agreed that I’d never be much of
a flyer, but was adamant that I still needed to practice.
He told me that woodpeckers hammered on trees and that was
what I should learn to do. A kind-hearted lad, he told me
that I should start out on a nice, soft tree like the stately
bur oak that stood in our farmyard.
I think that’s why I admire woodpeckers so much. When
I think of all the headaches and bloody noses they had to
go through to become what they are, I feel humbled.
The dictionary tells me that pileated means, “Crested,
having a crest on the pileum (top of the head of a bird).”
Shakespeare said, “What’s in a name?”
Pileated can be pronounced either “pie-lee-ated”
or “pill-e-ated”.
According to Walter Lantz's press agent, the idea for Woody
the Woodpecker came during the Walter’s honeymoon
with his wife, Gracie, in the area of Sherwood Lake in California.
A noisy Pileated Woodpecker awakened the couple by hammering
on the roof of the cabin at daybreak, and when a heavy rain
started, they learned that the bird had pecked holes in
the cabin's roof. Gracie suggested that her husband draw
a cartoon about the bird, and thus Woody the Woodpecker
was born. The story may be one created by the press agent,
but it’s an interesting one nevertheless.
Everyone in our group got good looks at the most accommodating
woodpecker.
To see the exquisite beauty of a bird such as the Pileated
Woodpecker is reason enough to own binoculars. On
a dismal day, the Pileated Woodpecker brought sunshine to
a flock of birders.
My mother would often ask, “Who knows what form an
angel takes when it comes to call?” On this
particular day, the form was that of a Pileated Woodpecker.
The Pileated Woodpecker was a gift; as was the company of
people who appreciated its presence.
All of nature is holy. The cathedrals are not only the preserved
habitats, but also the birds themselves. There are
rare birds, but seeing any bird makes for a rare moment.
Birds need special places. If we make sure they have these
special places, we, in turn, will have our own special places.
Even when we stop to use a restroom.
©Al
Batt
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