The Thrill of Bird Watching

Henri Rousseau, "The Virgin Forest"

Henri Rousseau, “The Virgin Forest”

Sports Saturday

I don’t know if bird watching is a sport or not, but it’s the activity that my recently deceased father engaged in for exercise. Although from his childhood he was nearly blind in one eye and couldn’t look straight up without experiencing vertigo, he was an excellent birder and just needed the tiniest flash of movement to identify what he was seeing.

He tried to interest his sons in the activity but none of us followed in his footsteps. Because I wanted to be like him in every possible way (I was the eldest), I made a valiant effort, getting up early in the morning to accompany him. I particularly remember early spring mornings, the sun barely up and the entire forest throbbing with birdsong.

Occasionally I got a sense of the magic, and I remember our delight when, this time in the early evening, we actually tracked two whippoorwills by their calls and saw both of them. I also remember, just a few years ago when we were visiting Yellowstone, sharing his joy as, for the first time in our lives, we saw an American dipper hopping beneath a waterfall.

In mythology, birds are often symbols of the journey between life and death. I became utterly convinced, after my oldest son died, that an osprey I saw whenever I visited the spot where he drowned was somehow connected with him. (It would sit in a tree watching me for however long I was there for a month after the event. I’ve never seen an osprey behave that way since.) Lucille Clifton in one of her poems talks about how there was an explosion of birds outside her window the moment that her husband died. So papa, if there’s any good birding to be had where you are now, I know you will take full advantage.

Here’s a Pablo Neruda poem in memory of my father’s bird watching. I like how the Chilean poet talks about the coolness and wetness of the early morning and of the “sacred conversations” going on all around him:

Ode To Bird Watching

Now 

Let’s look for birds! 

The tall iron branches 

in the forest, 

The dense 

fertility on the ground. 

The world 

is wet. 

A dewdrop or raindrop 

shines, 

a diminutive star 

among the leaves. 

The morning time 

mother earth 

is cool. 

The air 

is like a river 

which shakes 

the silence. 

It smells of rosemary, 

of space 

and roots. 

Overhead, 

a crazy song. 

It’s a bird. 

How 

out of its throat 

smaller than a finger 

can there fall the waters 

of its song? 

Luminous ease! 

Invisible 

power 

torrent 

of music 

in the leaves. 

Sacred conversations! 

Clean and fresh washed 

is this 

day resounding 

like a green dulcimer. 

I bury 

my shoes 

in the mud, 

jump over rivulets. 

A thorn 

bites me and a gust 

of air like a crystal 

wave 

splits up inside my chest. 

Where 

are the birds? 

Maybe it was 

that 

rustling in the foliage 

or that fleeting pellet 

of brown velvet 

or that displaced
perfume? That 

leaf that let loose cinnamon smell—
was that a bird?
That dust 

from an irritated magnolia 

or that fruit 

which fell with a thump – 

was that a flight? 

Oh, invisible little 

critters 

birds of the devil 

with their ringing 

with their useless feathers. 

I only want 

to caress them, 

to see them resplendent. 

I don’t want 

to see under glass 

the embalmed lightning. 

I want to see them living. 

I want to touch their gloves 

of real hide, 

which they never forget in 

the branches 

and to converse with 

them 

sitting on my shoulders 

although they may leave 

me like certain statues 

undeservedly whitewashed. 

Impossible. 

You can’t touch them. 

You can hear them 

like a heavenly 

rustle or movement. 

They converse 

with precision. 

They repeat 

their observations. 

They brag 

of how much they do. 

They comment 

on everything that exists. 

They learn 

certain sciences 

like hydrography. 

and by a sure science 

they know 

where there are harvests 

of grain.

— Translated by Jodey Bateman

 

 

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