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ird studies with a camera :with introdu
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BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
By FRANK M. CHAPMAN,
Associate Curator of Mammalogy and Ornithology in the
American Museum of “Natur ul History.
BIRD STUDIES WITH. n CAMERA. With Introductory Chapters
on the Outfit and Methods of the Bird Photographer.
Illustrated with over 100 Photographs from Nature by the
Author. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75.
This practical but fascinating book is a record of surprising achieve-
ments with the camera,
HANDBOOK OF BIRDS OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA.
With Keys to the Species, Descriptions of their Plumages,
Nests, etc., and their Distribution and Migrations. With
over 200 Illustrations. 12mo.
LIBRARY EDITION, $3.00.
POCKET EDITION, flexible covers, $3.50.
The book treats of all the birds, some five hundred and forty in num-
her, which have been found east of the Mississippi River, and from
the Arc Jcean to the Gulf of Mexico, and is thus of use in any part
of this om.
BIRD-LIFE. A Guide to the Study of our Common Birds.
EpITION DE LUXE, with 75 full-page lithographic plates,
representing roo birds in their natural colors, after draw-
ings by Ernest Thompson-Seton. Svo. Cloth, §5.co.
POPULAR EDITION in colors, &2.00 net; postage, 18 cents
additional.
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK.
1, Gannet (fying over), Murres, Puftins, and Razorbilled Auks.
BUI: coe US
WITH A CAMERA
WITH INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS
ON THE OUTFIT AND METHODS
OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER
By FRANK M. CHAPMAN
ASSISTANT CURATOR OF VERTEBRATE ZOOLOGY
IN THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HIS-
TORY, AND AUTHOR OF HANDBOOK OF BIRDS
OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA, BIRD-LIFE, ETC.
WITH OVER ONE HUNDRED PHOTOGRAPHS
FROM NATURE, BY THE AUTHOR
NEW YORK
D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
1903
CopyricutT, 1900,
By FRANK M. CHAPMAN.
All rights reserved.
THIS BOOK
IS DEDICATED TO
MY WIFE,
WHO, BOTH AT HOME AND AFIELD, IS EVER
“MY BEST ASSISTANT.”
You have learnt from the Birds and continue to learn,
Your best benefactors and early instructors.
Frere’s Aristophanes.
PREFACE
THE practice of photographing birds in Nature
is of too recent origin in this country to permit of
its being treated authoritatively. The methods
which may be employed are so numerous, the field
to be covered so limitless, that many years must
elapse before the bird photographer’s outfit will
meet his wants, while the constantly varying details
which surround his subjects almost prohibit dupli-
cation of experience.
But it is these very difficulties which render all
the more imperative the necessity of conference
among workers in this fascinating and important
branch of natural history. The causes of both
success and failure should, through the medium of
books and journals, be made accessible to all, there-
by shortening this experimental stage of the study
of birds with a camera, and hastening the day when
the nature of the outfit and methods shall have been
settled with more or less definiteness.
It is as a contribution toward this end, and as a
means of answering the queries of numerous corre-
spondents, that the following pages, embodying the
results of my own experiences, are offered. It is
sincerely hoped that they may increase the interest
Vil
vill BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
in the study of birds in Nature, and at the same
time furnish a more profitable and delightful out-
let for the hunting instinct than is afforded by the
shotgun or rifle.
A large proportion of the Bird Rock pictures and
several of those from Pelican Island have appeared
in the Century and St. Nicholas respectively, and
are here reproduced by the courtesy of the editors
of those magazines; others have been previously
published in Bird-Lore.
FRANK M. CHAPMAN.
AMERICAN Museum or Natura History,
New York ciry, March, 1900.
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION... : ; . Cae : ; me ee
What is bird photography {—The scientific value of bird
photography—The charm of bird photography.
THE OUTFIT AND METHODS OF THE BIRD
PHOTOGRAPHER
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT . ; : 5 e :
The camera—The lens—The shutter--The tripod—Plates
—Blinds—Sundries.
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER . ‘ 3 ,
Haunts—Seasons—Nests and eggs—Young birds—Adult
birds.
BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY BEGINS AT HOME A ‘ F ‘ z
Tue CHICKADEE—A STUDY IN BLACK AND WHITE
Tue Least BITTERN AND SOME OTHER REED INHABITANTS
Two Herons . 3 : ‘ 3 ‘ ; i ‘
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST
Two DAYS WITH THE TERNS ‘ ‘ ‘ : 3
Prerck AND BONAVENTURE . 3 é ‘
Tat MaapALens é ; ‘ 5 3 : F rl :
Brrp Rock .
Lire on Petican ISLAND, WITH SOME SPECULATIONS ON THE
ORIGIN OF BIRD MIGRATION
PAGE
ID oR C&O
Oo @
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE
. Gannet, Murres, Puffins, and Razorbilled Auks
Frontispiece
Tailpiece. Young Baltimore Oriole ; . 5
Initial. Long-focus camera and telephoto lens. F : 6
. Lens test No.1. 3 ; : : . 14
. Enlargement of the bird in test Ae 1 : ‘ : . 1d
. Lens test No.2. : : : : ; . 16
. Enlargement of bird in test te: Bos d : A . 17
. Lens test No.3. : ‘ : ‘ : ; i 18
. Enlargement of bird in test Mo, Bos : : : « 19
Initial. Young Great-crested Flycatcher . : ; . 26
. Spring . : : : 2 : ; ‘ é A . 2
9. Summer. : : : ‘ : : . : 27
. Autumn : : ; : : . 28
. Winter—four Sistakes (os 8- 1) from the same point
of view : ; : “ : - - ; . 28
. Nest locality of five species : : F = 129
. Nesting site, nest, and young of Mai Hace ‘ : . 380
. Young Marsh Hawks and nest . : : - ‘ . 21
. Young Great-crested Flycatcher : : : : . 82
. Young Baltimore Orioles and nest. ‘ : : . 83
. Wood Thrush on nest : : ‘ : : : . 284
. Chestnut-sided Warbler on nest : . : : . 385
. Catbird scolding . : $ a i ¢ : - o Sat
Initial, “ Fairview” . ‘ : : 5 : B . 40
. House Sparrows and Junco ‘ : : ; . Al
. Junco . z : : : « 42
. Female House Seine anal nest . : é ; . 48
xi
xil
ws
w
2ST
OW WwW WD
DQ
BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
. Sereech Owl
Initial. Chickadee
. Chickadee on ground .
. Chickadee taking piece of bread
. A bird in the hand
. Chickadee at nest hole
. Chickadee at nest hole
. A Chickadee family
. A Chickadee family
Initial, Red-winged Blackbird .
. Least Bittern’s nesting site
2. Least Bittern’s nest and eggs
. Least Bittern mimicking surroundings
. Least Bittern mimicking surroundings
5. Young Red-winged Blackbirds .
. Least Bittern eating her eggs
oot
. Least Bittern on nest .
Initial. Where the Night Herons isa
. Five Night Herons’ nests in swamp maple
A view in the Heron rookery
. Night Heron feeding .
. Young Night Herons in nest
. Young Night Herons leaving nest
3. Young Night Herons on branches
. Great Blue Heron, nests and young .
Initial, Tree Swallows on wires
. Hackensack marshes in August.
>. Marsh mallows
. Wild rice
. Tree Swallows on wires
Tree Swallows in tree
50. Tree Swallows on wire and at ahs
. Swallows in the road .
Initial. A corner of Penikese
. Nesting site, nest, and three eggs of Common fifa
. Tern hovering above nest.
. Nest and eggs of Tern on upland
PAGE
aaada
wooomea
eo
Qa +
oD >
io 2)
pare
vw
83
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS xill
PAGE
55. Tern’s nest and eggs in drift débris . . : : . 113
56. Young Tern hiding on rocky beach . * ; : . 114
57. Young Tern hiding in the grass : : . ; . 115
58. Tern alighting on nest : i 2 ; : : . 116
59. Tern on hillside nest . F ‘ : 5 ; . i LY,
60. Tern’s nest and hatching eggs in seaweed : ; . 118
61. Tern about to feed young . ‘ 2 , ‘ : . 119
62. Tern brooding young : . : ; : : . 120
63. Tern on beach nest . : : : : . ; « 12t
64. Tern on beach nest. 5 : 2 ‘ ‘ : . 121
65. Tern on upland nest 3 : ; . 122
66. Young Terns about four days old : : . . » 128
67. Young Tern about a week old. : : : : . 124
68. Young Tern, second plumage appearing . : : . 124
69. Young Tern, further advance of second plumage. . 125
70. Young Tern, stage before flight A 5 ‘ : . 126
Initial. A Percé codfisher . A : - ‘ : . 128
71. Percé Rock from the north : : : : = el
72. Percé Rock from the southeast . , : ; ss . 134
73. Splitting cod on Percé beach. : : : ; . 186
74. Young Savanna Sparrow . : , ; : ; ~ 137
75. Gannet cliffs of Bonaventure. : . ; A . 140
76. Cornel or bunchberry . : : : : ; : . 142
77. A ledge of nesting Gannets x ‘ ; : : . 144
Initial. Grosse Isle. : é : : ‘ e . 146
78. Nest and eggs of Fox Sparrow . 5 ‘ : ‘ ~ 148
79. Young Guillemots : ‘ F : : : . 150
Initial. The Bird Rock light 4 : i % ‘ . 152
80. Bird Rock from the southwest . : ; : : . 153
81. North side of Bird Rock : : ; : : . 156
82. A corner of the Rock . ‘ : : 3 . 160
83. The landing at the base of the Rea. : 3 : . 164
84. The landing on top of the Rock : ‘ : : . 165
85. Kittiwakes and young on nests . : : . 168
86. The lighthouse, keeper’s dwelling, and other bualines . 169
87. Razorbilled Auks and “Ringed” Murre . ; i . 170
88. Puffins é A 5 . 5 - : _ ‘ . 172
xiv
BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
. Murre’s egg
. Young Murres and egg
. Kittiwakes and young on nests .
. Entrance to Puflin’s burrow
3. Puflin’s nest and egg
. Young Puffin on nest .
. Leach’s Petrel on nest ; ‘
5. Young Leach’s Petrel with nesting material
. Young Gannet
. Gannets
. Gannets on nests
. Gannet on nest
Initial. Young Pelicans in nest tree .
. Pelicans on ground nests
. Interviewing a group of young Pelicans
. Among the Pelicans
. Head and pouch of Pelican
. Pelican’s pouch from above
. Newly hatched Pelicans and nests
. Young Pelican in tree nest
. Young Pelican, downy stage
. Young Pelican, wing quills appearing
. Young Pelicans, stage preceding flight
BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
WITH INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS ON THE OUTFIT
AND METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER
INTRODUCTION
What is Bird Photography?—Bird photography,
as I would encourage its practice, does not mean
simply photographing birds; it means the use of
the camera as an aid in depicting the life histories
of birds. A picture of the bird itself is, of course, of
the first importance, but any fact in its biography
which the camera can be employed to portray is
within the province of bird photography.
The Scientific Value of Bird Photography.—There
are certain matters, such as a bird’s song, its time of
migration, etc., which must be set forth with the
pen; there are others, such as its haunts, nesting
site, nest, eggs, the appearance and development of
its young, where the camera is so far ahead of the
pen in its power of graphic representation that it
is a waste of time to use the former when circum-
stances permit the utilization of the latter.
A photograph of a marsh or wood showing the
favorite haunts of a species is worth more than
pages of description. A picture of a bird’s nest-
ing site conveys a better idea of the situation than
words can possibly give, while in place of such
vague phrases as “nest of coarse grasses, weed
2 1
) BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
“a
stalks, rootlets, ete., lined with finer materials,” we
have a faithful delineation of the nest itself. The
shape and pattern of markings of the eggs may also
be well shown with the camera, while the appear-
ance of the young at birth, their development, and
often the manner in which they are fed, may all be
portrayed by the camera with a realism which con-
vinces one of the truthfulness of the result.
By the exercise of much patience and ingenuity
we may also photograph the adult bird, showing it
at rest or in motion, brooding its eggs or caring for
its young. Under favorable conditions such pic-
tures may possess an exactness of detail which
makes them perfect representations of the original,
giving not alone position and expression, but the
arrangement of the feathers, and they then have
scientific value unequaled by the best productions
of the artist’s brush or pencil.
From the nature of the case, perfection in this
branch of bird photography is not always attained ;
nevertheless, even pictures which are failures from
a photographic standpoint may be of interest to
the naturalist. They may be lacking in detail and
still give pose, thus furnishing models from which
drawings containing all structural essentials may
be made.
The camera may also supply us with graphic
records of the few large colonies of birds yet exist-
ing in this country, thereby preserving for all time
definite impressions of conditions which are rapidly
becoming things of the past.
What an invaluable addition to the history of
the Great Auk would be a series of photographs
INTRODUCTION 3
from Funk Island, taken during the period of its
existence there !
Of what surpassing interest would be photo-
graphs of the former flights of Wild Pigeons, which
the younger generations of to-day can with diffi-
culty believe occurred!
The Charm of Bird Photography.—As a one-
time sportsman, who yielded to none in his enjoy-
ment of the chase, I can affirm that there is a fasci-
nation about the hunting of wild animals with a
camera as far ahead of the pleasure to be derived
from their pursuit with shotgun or rifle as the sport
found in shooting Quail is beyond that of breaking
clay “ Pigeons.” Continuing the comparison, from a
sportsman’s standpoint, hunting with a camera is
the highest development of man’s inherent love of
the chase.
The killing of a bird with a gun seems little
short of murder after one has attempted to cap-
ture its image with a lens. The demands on the
skill and patience of the bird photographer are end-
less, and his pleasure is intensified in proportion
to the nature of the difficulties to be overcome, and
in the event of success it is perpetuated by the infi-
nitely more satisfactory results obtained. He does
not rejoice over a bag of mutilated flesh and feath-
ers, but in the possession of a trophy—an eloquent
token of his prowess as a hunter, a talisman which
holds the power of revivifying the circumstances
attending its acquisition.
What mental vision of falling birds can be as
potent as the actual picture of living birds in their
homes ? And how immeasurably one’s memories are
4 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
brightened by the fact that this is not a picture of
what has been but of what is!
The camera thus opens the door to a field of sport
previously closed to those who love birds too much
to find pleasure in killing them; to whom Bob-
White’s ringing whistle does not give rise to mur-
derous speculations as to the number in his family,
but to an echo of the season’s joy which his note
voices. They therefore have a new incentive to take
them out of doors; for however much we love Na-
ture for Nature’s sake, there are few of us whose
pleasure in an outing is not intensified by securing
some definite, lasting result.
We are not all poets and seers, finding sufficient
reward for a hard day’s tramp in a sunset glow or
the song of a bird. Enjoy these things as we may,
who would not like to perpetuate the one or the
other in some tangible form ?
And here we have one of the reasons for the col-
lecting of birds and eggs long after the collector’s
needs are satisfied. He goes on duplicating and
reduplicating merely to appease the almost univer-
sal desire to possess any admired although useless
object. Once let him appreciate, however, the pleas-
ure of hunting with a camera, the greater skill re-
quired, and the infinitely greater value of the results
to be obtained, and he will have no further use for
gun, climbing irons, and egg drill.
Furthermore, the camera hunter possesses the ad-
vantage over the so-called true sportsman, in that all
is game that falls to his gun; there is not a bird too
small or too tame to be unworthy of his attention ;
nor are there seasonal restrictions to be observed,
INTRODUCTION 5
nor temptations to break game laws, but every day
in the year he is free to go afield, and at all times
he may find something to claim his attention,
Finally, there is to be added to the special charm
of bird photography the general charm attending
the use of the camera. Thousands of people are
finding pleasure in the comparatively prosaic em-
ployment of photographing houses, bridges, and
other patiently immovable objects wholly at the
camerist’s mercy. Imagine, then, the far greater
enjoyment of successes not only of real value in
themselves, but undeniable tributes to one’s skill
both as photographer and hunter.
Nor should this introduction be closed without
due acknowledgment to the educational value of
photography, to its power to widen the scope of our
vision, and to increase our appreciation of the beau-
tiful. There is a magic in the lens, the ground glass,
and the dark cloth which transform the commonest
object into a thing of rarest interest.
THE OUTFIT AND METHODS OF THE
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT
|HE beginner must not suppose that
good bird photographs can be
made only with expensive appa-
/| ratus. Under favorable conditions
there is no great difference in the
results secured with the ordinary
camera and lens of any reputable
maker and fide of the highest class) My own
work has for the greater part been done with an
outfit costing about thirty dollars; and although
the best lens is, of course, to be desired it is not a
necessity, and cost therefore is no more an obstacle
to the hunting of birds with a camera than it is
to their pursuit with a gun.
The Camera.—tIndividual taste will doubtless
govern the size of the camera chosen, but most natu-
ralists and sportsmen consider the camera carrying a
plate four by five inches as the one best adapted to
their wants, and with this decision I heartily agree.
The advantages of size, weight, and economy, both
as regards the camera, its holders, and plates, are all
in favor of the 4 x 5, while as far as the bird pho-
tographer is concerned, it is not often that he has
need of anything larger. The image of a bird will
rarely be without adequate setting in a space four
6
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 7
by five inches, which will also be found to be large
enough for the portrayal of nests and eggs.
The 4 X 5 also reduces proportionately in making
lantern slides, and if the picture is made the long
way of the plate—that is, higher than broad—it can
be easily adapted for illustrative purposes in duo-
decimo or octavo books. When a larger picture is
desired it can readily be made by enlargement, an
increase in size of three diameters, or six times the
area, being possible from a sharp negative without
undue loss of definition.
For use from a tripod any one of the several ex-
cellent long-focus cameras now on the market will
be found to answer every requirement. If it is pro-
posed to employ a telephoto lens, care should be
taken to select the camera combining greatest bel-
lows length with rigidity. A reversible back in-
creases the size somewhat but adds to the length of
bellows, and will be found serviceable in the many
awkward situations in which the bird photographer
is often placed by the nature of his subjects.
The Kearton brothers have an “adjustable min-
iature” on the top of their camera, which they state
“is used as a sort of view finder when making studies
of flying birds. When fixed in position and its
focus has been set exactly like its working com-
panion beneath it, both are racked out in the same
ratio by the screw dominating the larger appa-
ratus.”* The purposes of this attachment, however,
* From Wild Life at Tome, how to Study and Photograph It,
by R. Kearton, illustrated by C. Kearton; a work of the utmost
interest to the animal photographer, who should also read With
Nature and a Camera, by the same authors (Cassell & Co.)
8 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
will, it seems probable, be better served by the re-
flecting camera described below, while as a finder
alone its place may be taken by the “iconoscope ”
and other of the prism finders, the brilliant image
cast by which is such a striking and satisfactory
improvement on the hazy outlines given by the
average so-called “ finder.”
For use as a hand-box only two kinds of camera
are available, for it must be borne in mind that
the set-focus or short-focus, wide angle “ snap-shot ”
cameras, So popular among the button-pressing fra-
ternity, are not adapted to the wants of the bird
photographer, who must therefore avail himself of
either a twin-lens or a reflecting camera.
Twin-lens cameras are manufactured by several
well-known firms, but the trade size is of too short
focus to be desirable. In this type of camera two
lenses of equal foci are employed. They are set one
above the other in bellows, which move as one. The
lower lens makes the picture, the upper projects <
duplicate of the image cast by the lower lens to a
mirror set at an angle of forty-five degrees to the
plane of the plate, whence it is reflected upward to
a ground glass, which is protected by a hood, on top
of the camera.
To focus perfectly the lenses should be “matched ”
or “paired ”—in short, interchangeable—thereby
greatly increasing the cost of the camera, which is
also rendered objectionable by its large size.
The reflecting camera possesses all the advan-
tages of the twin-lens, but requires only one lens,
and when in use is not materially larger than the
ordinary 4 X 5 long-focus box.
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 9
The reflecting camera now in my possession was
designed and made by John Rowley, of the Ameri-
can Museum of Natural History, and was fully de-
scribed and illustrated by him in Bird-Lore for
April, 1900. It resembles the upper half of the twin-
lens camera in that a mirror, set at an angle of
forty-five degrees to the plate, is interposed between
the latter and the lens, and reflects its image to a
ground glass on top of the camera. This mirror,
however, is movable, and the desired object appear-
ing in focus on the ground glass, a lever is pressed
downward which raises the mirror to the top of the
box, where it automatically releases a focal-plane
shutter (see beyond, under The Shutter) directly in
front of the plate, when the image-bearing rays, be-
fore intercepted and reflected by the mirror, are
registered on the plate, from which the slide had
previously been drawn.
When the focal-plane or curtain shutter has been
set and the slide drawn from the plate holder, this
camera is like a cocked gun, which may be fired the
moment it is sighted; or, in other words, the ex-
posure may be made the instant focus is secured.
With this camera one may take advantage of any
offering opportunity to secure a picture of a bird
or beast when afield, and this fact, by increasing
the possibilities of an outing, adds greatly to its
pleasure.
Mr. Rowley has so designed this camera that it
may be used from a tripod as well as in the hands;
but when the tripod camera is to be left, perhaps
for hours, hidden near some bird’s nest, I prefer to
employ the long-focus for this purpose, and retain
10 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
the reflecting camera for possible use on the birds
that so often approach closely when one is in hiding.
The advantages possessed by this camera are so ap-
parent that it doubtless will soon be placed on the
market.
The Lens.—Professional photographers differ so
widely in their opinions of the relative qualities of
the various makes of lenses now on the market, that
I approach this subject with diffidence, and, without
presuming to offer advice, present the results of my
experience both as to lenses and the requirements of
the bird photographer. In regard to the latter phase
of the much-discussed question of “ What lens shall
I use?” I may speak with more confidence. For
nests with eggs or young birds—subjects which may
be approached closely—a six- to eight-inch-focus lens
forms a large enough image, and at the same time
gives depth of focus and sharpness of definition
without the use of the smaller diaphragms. In pho-
tographing birds, however, it is generally difficult
to get within “shooting” distance, and at least a
fourteen- to sixteen-inch lens is needed in order to
secure an image of sufficient size. Depth of focus
is here, in my opinion, not desirable, and the focal
point—the bird—is brought out more clearly by the
fusion of all the objects back of it into a uniform
background.
When a bird, either young or old, is the subject,
great speed may be required, and sometimes under
light conditions which severely test the qualities of
the lens. To fully meet these demands of distance
and time two lenses would be needed: but, aside
from the increased cost and the inconvenience of
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 11
using two lenses, the great size and weight of a
long-focus lens are drawbacks. These objections are
largely overcome by the use of the symmetrical
lenses placed in most of the long-focus boxes, or, if
expense be not considered, by a “convertible” lens.
For several years I have used a “ Victor” lens,
sold with the “Premo” long-focus camera. The
combined focus of the front and back lenses is seven
and a half inches, of either of the lenses alone, fif-
teen inches. The single lens therefore, the distance
being the same, gives an image double the size of
that cast by the two lenses together.
This lens has been thoroughly tested, and many
of the pictures given in this book were made with it.
When the conditions are favorable and the subject
not extremely difficult it yields satisfactory results.
The “convertible” lenses of various makers are
also separable, and where the rear and front lenses
are of different foci three focal lengths are obtain-
able. These lenses are of the highest grade, and
consequently expensive. Ina bright light, or where
great speed is not required, they do not seem to be
as superior to the trade lens as the much higher
price would lead one to expect. But in dull days, or
in the shadow, or where extremely rapid exposures
are necessary, their superior qualities become evi-
dent. My experience with these convertible lenses
has been lmited to the Zeiss Anastigmat, Series
VII a, of which I am now using a No. 10 with a
combined focus of eight inches, the front and rear
lenses both having a focal length of fourteen inches.
This combination is preferred to one in which the
component lenses are of different foci, because of the
12 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
greater speed of the two when combined, and fur-
thermore, because, being of the same focus, they
could, if occasion arose, be used in a twin-lens box.
The speed of the combination is registered at F. 6.3;
that of the single lenses at 12.5. With the former
the most rapid exposures can be made successfully,
while the latter are sufficiently fast to permit of
ordinary instantaneous work. This lens is stated
to cover a 5 X 8} plate, and when in use on a 45
camera gives a high degree of illumination and per-
fect definition.
The telephoto lens may be employed in certain
kinds of bird photography with not unsatisfactory
results. Its disadvantages are lack of speed, an ex-
posure of at least one half a second to a second being
required at F. 8 in bright sunlight, the necessity
of extreme care in focusing, and of absolute rigidity
of the camera at the time of making the exposure.
In short, the telephotographer needs more time,
both before and after pressing his bulb, than the
bird photographer is often accorded. However, with
such subjects as nests high in trees or on cliffs,
Herons and other shore-inhabiting birds, Ducks on
the water or Hawks perched in leafless trees, the
telephoto will be found serviceable.
Negatives are frequently secured in which the
figure of the bird, while small, is sharp, when, by
enlargement, a desirable picture can be made of
what in the original was too small to be easily dis-
tinguishable. An increase in size of two diameters
is possible from any fairly sharp negative, but if the
object be in perfect focus an increase of four diame-
ters may be made.
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 13
These enlargements may be made with an en-
larging camera or with the aid of a Nehring enlarg-
ing lens, which is placed between the front and back
lenses of the view lens, when, with the ordinary
long-focus camera, a magnification of about four
diameters may be obtained, the image being thrown
on to a piece of bromide paper in the plate holder.
Through enlargement many apparently worth-
less negatives become of value, and in some in-
stances pictures can be made from different parts of
the same negative. From the sportsman-photog-
rapher’s standpoint there is, however, one objection
to the use of a magnifying lens. It gives deceptive
results, and those who are not familiar with its
powers are apt to accord the photographer undue
praise for his apparent skill in successfully ap-
proaching some bird or beast which may have been
far out of range. A not wholly unrelated kind of
enlargement is sometimes applied to the contents of
creels and game bags!
But the animal photographer is so heavily handi-
capped that in this case the end assuredly justifies
the means. Asa matter of information, however, it
seems eminently desirable to accompany all enlarged
pictures by a statement of the extent of their mag-
nification, and throughout this book this plan is fol-
lowed. Consequently, when there is no mention of
enlargement, it may be accepted as a fact that the
print from which the reproduction was made was
obtained from the negative by contact.
In illustration of these suggestions in regard to
the proper lenses for bird photography, a series of
pictures is presented which shows the results to be
14 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
obtained under the same conditions with different
lenses,
Placing a mounted Flicker (Colaptes awratus) on
a fence post, and setting up my tripod at a measured
2. Lens Test No. 1. Mounted Flicker on fenee post, distanee fifty feet.
Kight-inch focus, Zeiss Convertible, No. 10, Series Vila lens; dia-
phragm F. 8, 3/25 second ; Cramer “Crown” plate. Photographed at
noon, in sunlight, November 80, 1899.
distance of fifty feet, a series of test exposures was
made, of which three are presented as follows: First?
eight-inch lens (Zeiss Convertible Series VII a, No.
10), stop F. 8, time 9! second; second,’ fourteen-inch
front lens of the combination, stop F. 16 (equivalent
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 15
to F. 4 of the eight-inch) ; third,’ telephoto attach-
ment with eight-inch lens, twenty-one-inch bellows,
stop F.8 of the eight-inch, time one second. Com-
menting on the results of these tests it may first be
3. The bird in Test No. 1 enlarged about three diameters.
mentioned that in the “ Unicum” shutter employed
exposures of a so-called “745” and “31,” seconds gave
exactly the same results both with the combined
eight-inch lens and the front fourteen-inch lens; the
actual time, however, was doubtless not far from 3
of a second. The negatives, therefore, show, in the
first place, that the long-focus lens is capable of
doing fairly rapid work. Continuing our compari-
16 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
son, we observe that the eight-inch gives a fairly
wide field, excellent depth of focus, but a very small
image of the bird, for which alone the picture has
been made. With the fourteen-inch we decrease the
ce
y e
¥
4. Lens Test No, 2. Same subject, distanee, plate, and date as Test No, 1.
Front lens (fourteen-inch foeus) of Zeiss Convertible, No. 10; dia-
phragm F. 165 #/g5 second,
extent of the field nearly one half and almost double
the size of the object pictured. This, however, has
been done at the loss of depth of focus, not even the
first of the line of posts running directly into the
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 17
background being sharply defined, while with the
eight-inch all are in focus.
The telephoto gives an enlargement of about six
diameters of the image thrown by eight-inch lens,
5. The bird in Test No, 2 enlarged about three diameters.
and three diameters increase of that of the fourteen-
inch lens. It practically restricts the picture to the
immediate surroundings of the bird, and is without
focal depth.
Having now made three good negatives in the
field, we may, by enlargement, improve on the image
of the bird obtained. The possibilities in this direc-
tion are clearly shown by the three enlargements
3
18 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
accompanying the contact prints from their respec-
tive negatives. In each instance the enlargement is
about three diameters, and the telephoto negative
of course furnishes the most satisfactory picture.
6. Lens Test No. 8. Same subject, distanee, plate, and date as Tests Nos.
2and 3. Eightinch Zeiss Convertible, Series Vila, No. 10, with tele-
photo attachment ; diaphragm F. 8; twenty-one-inch bellows ; one sec-
ond (#/g second was later found to be full time).
When the difficulties of telephotography are consid-
ered, however, and the 4!;-second exposure of the
fourteen-inch lens, which permits of hand work, is
compared with the one second of the telephoto, we
believe that for general work in photographing
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 19
birds a lens having a focal length of at least four-
teen inches will be found the most satisfactory.
It should be added that, in order to make them
wholly comparable, the three contact prints as well
4. The bird in Test No. 3 enlarged about three diameters.
as the enlargements were made on enameled bromide
paper.
The Shutter—For fairly rapid, slow, and time
exposures, a lens shutter, such as is sold with trade
cameras, will be found suitable. Simplicity and
noiselessness are the chief requirements in this kind
of a shutter. The “Iris Diaphragm” shutter is noise-
30 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
less when used for slow exposures of two or three
seconds, a matter of much importance in making
time pictures of sitting birds, who are apt to turn
their head if they hear the click of the shutter. This
shutter, however, does not respond quickly in slow
exposures and is very heavy, a disadvantage in tele-
photography.
The “ Unicum” shutter is lighter, responds quick-
ly, has a lever to which a thread may be attached
for making exposures from a distance, can be easily
diaphragmed from the rear, but is not wholly noise-
less. There are also other shutters, each possessing
good points of its own, and the selection of any one of
them for use in medium rapid, slow, or time work
can be left to the photographer, who should, how-
ever, remember that the time scales on these shutters
represent degrees of difference and not exact meas-
urements of time, and that there is great variation
in the exposures of different shutters of the same
make when similarly adjusted. Thus the “one fifth
of a second” of one shutter may be equivalent to
the “one second” of another. The scale on most of
these shutters calls for a speed not exceeding a 74>
part of a second, but this is far too slow an exposure
to successfully photograph a flying bird at short
range where a speed of at least ;4; of a second is
required,
For very rapid work the choice is limited to one
kind of shutter—that is, the foeal-plane, which in
effect is a curtain with an adjustable slit which is
placed directly in front of the plate. Great speed
with this shutter is in part secured by inereasing
the tension of the spring, which acts as its motive
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 91
power, but more particularly by decreasing the
width of the slit. Assuming, therefore, that it
takes one second for the slit to pass from top to bot-
tom of a plate four inches high, and that the slit is
one inch in width, it follows that each portion of
the plate is exposed to the light for a quarter of a
second. Decreasing the width of the slit one half,
proportionally reduces the time of the exposure,
and by this means, in connection with an increase in
the speed with which the curtain is moved, an ex-
posure of yy55 Of a second is possible.
In addition to possessing the advantage of great
speed, this shutter also passes a higher percentage of
light than a lens shutter even when the actual time
of the so-called exposure is the same. This is due
to the fact that the lens opening is in no way af-
fected, it being the same throughout the exposure.
With a lens shutter, on the contrary, the full value
of the opening is given for only a fractional part of
the exposure, the parts of the shutter more or less
filling the opening during the rest of the time.
With a focal-plane shutter, therefore, one may do
rapid work under conditions where a lens shutter
could not be successfully employed; time exposures,
however, can not be made with the focal-plane
shutter, and for all-around work the camera
should be fitted with both a lens and a focal-plane
shutter.
The reflecting camera, as before stated, is fitted
with a focal-plane shutter, and, as described, it is
released by pressing the lever, which raises the mir-
ror. Lens shutters, however, are released by a
pneumatic bulb, or in some cases by a thread or
Oy) BIRD STUDIES WITIT A CAMERA
wa
string. When the exposure is to be made from a
distance as much as one hundred feet of tubing may
be employed. With any length of over twenty-five
feet an extra large bulb is required. The ordinary
tubing sold by photographers will not be found so
well adapted to long-distance work as a less elastic
kind, which does not so readily yield to pressure and
transmits a larger portion of the force apphed when
squeezing the bulb.
The Tripod.—A stout two-length tripod is to be
preferred to one of the slender multifolding type, in
which stability is sacrificed to weight and size. The
legs, except the inner sides of the upper section into
which the lower section slides, and brass work should
be painted bark color in order to make them as in-
conspicuous as possible. For use in the water a
metal tripod will prove more serviceable than one
of wood.
A very useful substitute for a tripod is the
” Dpall-and-socket clamp designed more
“ Graphic
especially for bicycle camerists. With it a camera
can easily be attached to the limb of a tree, rung of
a ladder, or, by screwing a block on to the head of
the tripod, it may be employed in connection with
the tripod—in fact its applicability will be evident
to every one using it.
Plates—Among the many excellent brands of
plates now offered to photographers there is really
very little difference. However, it is advisable to
select the one you think the most rapid and use it
to the exclusion of all others. Under certain cir-
cumstances—in photographing Robins, for instance
—isochromatic plates will be found desirable, and
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER'S OUTFIT 93
a
where a strong head light can not be avoided non-
halation plates may be employed.
So much industry, skill, and patience are gener-
ally required of the bird photographer before he
makes an exposure that he should guard against all
chances of failure from the photographic side. It is
therefore advisable to thoroughly test plates which
it is probable may be exposed on a very difficult
subject. Under no circumstances should the plate
holders be needlessly exposed to the light, and when
the camera is to be left for an indefinite period with
the slide drawn from the holder and plate ready to
expose, it should be carefully wrapped in the dark
cloth.
Blinds.—As the sportsman constructs blinds in
which he may conceal himself from his prey, so the
bird photographer may employ various means of
hiding from his subjects. The Keartons recommend
an artificial tree trunk for use in wooded places and
an artificial rubbish heap for open fields. The former
may be made of light duck, painted to resemble
bark, and placed over a frame.
The frame of the Keartons’ is of bamboo, but I
find white pine answers very well, the main things
to be considered being lightness and portability.
The frame should therefore be collapsible in order
that it may be easily packed.
The Keartons’ field blind or “ rubbish heap ” con-
sists of an umbrella, to each of the ribs of which
strips of bamboo four feet in length are tied. This
is then covered with light brown holland and wisps
of straw tied over it in such a way as to “ virtually
thatch the whole structure.” Doubtless cornstalks
94 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
properly arranged would make an excellent field
blind.
It is difficult to carry one of these blinds in
addition to a camera, etc., without assistance, and
I fear that the inconvenience attending their use
will restrict them to the few enthusiasts who count
neither time, labor, nor cost in attaining a desired
end.
For my own part, I prefer, when possible, to con-
ceal my camera and make the exposure from a dis-
tance rather than to weight myself with a portable
blind and to endure the discomforts of being con-
fined within it.
Sundries.—The bird photographer will find that
he requires numerous articles not usually to be found
in the regulation photographic outfit, as, for exam-
ple, climbers for ascending trees and stout cords for
hauling the camera up after him; a dark-cloth, green
in color, to aid in disguising the camera, and a mir-
ror. The latter should be of plate glass, and meas-
ure at least twelve by ten inches. A good plan is to
buy a piece of glass of desired size and frame it sim-
ply in white pine. It may then be attached to a
limb, a stick driven in the ground, or other conven-
ient object, by means of the ball-and-socket clamp
mentioned under Tripods, which may be screwed into
the back or the outer border of the frame. Such a
mirror will reflect sunlight many yards to shaded
nests, where, in photographing old or young birds, a
quick exposure is necessary. A vest-pocket mirror,
for use in reflecting the reading of the diaphragms
or time on the shutter, will permit one to make the
desired changes from the rear, and thus prove help-
THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER’S OUTFIT 25
ful when conditions do not permit one to work in
front of the camera.
A device which might be arranged on the princi-
ple of a trap, the trigger to be sprung and exposure
made when the bait is taken, would doubtless cap-
ture some interesting pictures. An apparatus con-
nected with an automatically fired flash-hght, has
been employed by Mr. G. A. Shiras, of Pittsburg, in
photographing deer at night, with phenomenal suc-
cess. The connection with the camera shutter was
so made that the deer, in walking, touched a cord
which exploded the flash-light, and, at the same mo-
ment, made the exposure. The light weight of most
birds, however, requires a much more delicate appa-
ratus, while an even greater difficulty is found in
the movement caused by the release of the trigger,
which startles the bird just as the exposure is
made,
Thus far in my experiments I have been unable
to overcome these objections, but I trust some other
bird photographer will be more successful.
Those who are ambitious in the direction of cliff
photography I would refer to the Keartons’ admi-
rable treatise on the subject in their Wild Life at
Home, for a description of the paraphernalia needed
and the manner in which it should be used. My
own experience in this line is limited, and I confess
to the utter absence of a desire to increase it!
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER
LAIMING no special knowledge of
the technique of pure photogra-
phy, I would refer the beginner to
any of the several excellent books
designed to explain the rudiments
of optical and chemical photogra-
phy, and to instruct in regard to
the matters of exposing, developing, printing, ete.
Only such suggestions are given here, therefore, as
relate directly to the manner in which birds, their
nests, eggs, and haunts may be photographed.
Haunts. — Photographs of the characteristic
haunts of birds should show not alone general to-
pography, but should also be made with special ref-
erence to the bird’s feeding habits, which, more than
anything else, govern the nature of the locality
selected. Thus, a photograph of the home of the
Woodcock would have added value if, in the imme-
>
diate foreground, the “borings”? made by this bird
in probing the earth for food were evident; or a
marsh scene, in which wild rice was conspicuous,
would tell something of both the haunts and the
food habits of the Reedbird and Red-winged Black-
bird in August and September. In a similar way,
pictures of wild cherry and dogwood trees, of bay-
berries and red cedar, which show both fruit and
26
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER 97
surroundings, are of interest in connection with the
biographies of many birds.
Seasons.—The camera permits us to make so ex-
act a record of the rise and fall of the year, as it is
registered by vegeta-
tion, that we can actu-
ally compare existing
conditions with those |
which prevailed at any
previous time. Com-
pare, for example, the
series of four pic-
tures*" here presented,
all made from the same 8. Spring.
point of view, in order
to appreciate how graphically seasonal changes may
be shown by the camera. In this instance, photog-
raphy is of more service to the botanist than to the
ornithologist; but every student of migration knows
how closely related are
the appearance of cer-
tain birds and _ flow-
ers, and will readily
appreciate, therefore,
the value of a series
of photographs of sev-
eral different subjects,
taken at short inter-
vals, and showing the
changes in vegetation due to the approach of sum-
mer or winter. In connection with such related
phenomena as temperature, rainfall, and weather,
these pictures form as accurate a record of the sea-
9, Summer.
98 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
sous as it is possible to make, and if data of this
kind could be brought together from many selected
localities, we should have an admirable basis for the
intelligent study of certain phases of bird migration.
Nests and Hggs.—
The photographing of
nests is one of the sim-
pler forms of bird pho-
tography, but in mauy
instances success is
achieved only through
the exercise of much
patience and ingenuity. 10. Autumn.
It should constantly
be borne in mind, in photographing nests, that what
is desired is not so much a picture of the nest alone
as one which shows it in relation to its environment
—in short, a picture of the nesting site is of more
value than one of the
nest only. It is advis-
/ \ able, however, to make
at least three pictures,
two! of which shall
show the nature of the
locality chosen, the
other" the character
Dadkgrreet “| of the nest and its im-
11. Winter. mediate surroundings.
When the nest is not
above five feet from the ground, little difficulty will
be experienced in securing the desired picture.
When on the ground it will sometimes be found
helpful to put what naturally would be the rear
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER 99
leg of the tripod forward, between the other two,
when it will serve as a brace from in front, and per-
mit the camera to be tilted well downward without
danger of its falling.
Nests at an elevation of seven or eight feet, in
saplings, may be photographed by lengthening the
tripod with short legs, each supplied with two sta-
a
|
12. To show nest locality of: 1, Tree Swallow; 2, American Bittern; 3,
Song Sparrow; 4, Maryland Yellow-throat ; 5, Marsh Hawk, of which
nesting site, nest, and young are shown in the two following pictures,
Nos. 18 and 14. Meridian, N. Y., June 8, 1898.
ples or collars into which the ends of the tripod may
be slipped; or a ladder or light scaffolding will
sometimes be found necessary.
For photographing nests in trees the “ Graphic”
ball-and-socket clamp is of great assistance. With
it the camera may be attached to a limb, or, if the
limb is too large, a block may be nailed to it, thus
30 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
furnishing a grip to which the clamp may be fas-
tened.
Nests should be photographed from the side, but
15. Nesting site, nest, and young of Marsh Hawk.
eggs should be photographed from above in order
to show their position in the nest as they were ar-
ranged by the incubating bird. The nest should
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER = 3]
therefore never be tipped, nor should the eggs be
touched, lest the value of the subject be destroyed.
The markings of most birds’ eggs are already well
known, but if photographs of them are desired they
can be made from the thousands of eggshells with
which ill-directed effort has stocked the cabinets of
misguided odlogists.
14, Young Marsh Hawks and nest.
It is not advisable to make photographs of nests
in the sunlight, a diffused light giving greater de-
tail. A screen of some thin white material should
therefore be used as a shade when photographing
nests exposed to the direct rays of the sun. This,
however, will not be found necessary if the picture
be made within two or three hours after sunrise,
82 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
when the light is soft and the foliage comparatively
motionless, permitting the use of a small diaphragm
and a long exposure.
Young Birds.—The ease with which photographs
of young birds may often be secured, the fact that
with the camera their appearance and development
may be more satisfactorily recorded than in any
other way, makes their study by the photographer
of exceeding importance. Photographs of young
birds should = of
course be accom-
panied by notes on
food, calls, special
actions, etc., which
the camera can not
well portray.
The young bird
is a worthy subject
from the moment
it leaves the shell
until, as far as
15. Young Great-erested Flycatcher. flight is concerned,
it deserves to be
ranked with its elders. When possible, series of
pictures should be made showing the rate of growth
of the same brood from the period of hatching to
the date when the nest is deserted. Circumstances
do not, however, often permit of the forming of
these ideal series, and we must therefore photograph
the young bird as we find him, either before or
after’ he has made his initial flight, or as he is
preparing for it.”
The suggestions made under the head of Birds’
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER 33
oO
Nests and Eggs will apply in a general way to pho-
tographing young in the nest; but even when at
rest in other respects, the rapid respiration of nest-
lings requires a quick exposure to insure sharpness
of outline, and, when in the shadow, sufficient illu-
16. Young Baltimore Orioles and nest.
mination can be secured only with the aid of a
reflector.
Adult Birds.—It is in photographing birds in the
full possession of the powers of maturity that the
bird photographer’s skill and patience are put to
the most severe tests. It might be said that, from
a strictly ornithological point of view, the results
obtained do not in many instances justify the time
expended. Success, however, in this field, as in many
others, is not to be measured by the attainment of a
certain end, but often by the experience gained in
what, to one having only the ultimate object in
view, may seem to have been fruitless effort.
4
34 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
In matching one’s ability as a hunter against the
timidity and cunning of a bird, relations are estab-
lished between the photographer and his subject
which of necessity result in their becoming inti-
mately associated.
Doubtless we shall never know just what birds
think of the peculiar antics in which the camera
17. Wood Thrush on nest.
enthusiast sometimes indulges, but certain it is that
an attempt to photograph some of the most familiar
and presumably best-known birds will open the
photographer’s eyes to facts in their life histories
of which he was previously in utter ignorance.
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER = 35
As a known and fixed point to which the bird
may be expected to return, the nest offers the best
opportunity to the bird photographer, and photo-
graphs of adult birds on or at their nests are more
common than those taken under other conditions.” ¥*
Birds vary greatly in their attitude toward a
camera which has been erected near their homes;
some species paying
little attention to it,
and, after a short
time, coming and go-
ing as though it had
always been there,
while others are sus-
picious of any object
which changes the
appearance of their
surroundings.
With the latter
special precautions
are necessary, and
unusual care should
be taken in working about their nests lest they be
made to desert it. The long-focus lens is here of
great service, for it enables one to secure a suf-
ficiently large image from a distance of ten or twelve
feet. Even then it will often be necessary to con-
ceal or disguise the camera by covering it with the
green dark-cloth, vines, and leaves. A rubber tube
or thread of requisite length is then attached and
the exposure is made from a distance.
A dummy camera, composed of a box or log
wrapped in a green cloth and placed on a tripod
18. Chestnut-sided Warbler on nest.
36 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
made from saplings, may sometimes be erected to
advantage several days before one expects to attempt
to photograph the bird, who in the meantime be-
comes accustomed to it and quickly returns to the
nest after the real camera has been substituted.
The artificial tree trunk would doubtless be of
assistance in some kinds of bird-at-the-nest photog-
raphy, especially when one desired to secure pictures
of the old bird feeding its young, and was obliged
therefore to make the exposure at just the proper
moment. In most instances, however, there is suffi-
cient undergrowth in the immediate vicinity to
afford concealment, from which with the aid of a
glass one may take note of events.
With the reflecting camera one may stalk birds
on foot or with a boat, or “squeak” them into range
by kissing the back of the hand vigorously, a sound
which, during the nesting season especially, arouses
much curiosity or anxiety in the bird’s mind.
The decoys, blinds, batteries, sneak boxes, etc., of
the sportsman are also at the disposal of the hunter
with a camera, though I must admit that my one
outing to photograph bay birds over decoys resulted
in an empty bag. It was in the spring, however,
when the bay birds surviving had experienced two
shooting seasons and were exceedingly wild. In the
fall, with birds born the preceding summer, one
might be more successful.
Birds may be sometimes brought within range
of the camera by baiting them with food, and, after
they have learned to expect it, placing the camera
in suitable position. This may be most easily
done when there is snow on the ground, at which
THE METHODS OF TITE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER 37
time hunger makes most birds less suspicious of
danger.
From a considerable experience which, through
poor equipment, has not yielded adequate return, [am
convinced that one may secure excellent pictures of
many birds by decoying them with either a mounted
19. Catbird scolding.
or living Owl; doubtless the latter would be prefer-
able, though I have never tried it. With a poorly
mounted Screech Owl, however, I have had some
excellent opportunities to photograph. My plan is
to select some spot where birds are numerous, pref-
erably near the home of a Catbird,” place the Owl in
a conspicuous position, and erect near it a “ scolding
perch,” from which the protesting bird may con-
388 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
veniently vituperate the poor unoffending little
bunch of feathers with its staring yellow eyes. The
camera is then focused on the scolding perch and
the photographer retires into the undergrowth, and,
bulb in hand, waits for some bird to take the desired
stand. ,
A Catbird’s domain is chosen for the reason that
this species is the alarmist of whatever neighbor-
hood it may inhabit, and once its attention has been
attracted to the Owl by “squeaking” or uttering
the alarm notes of other birds, the photographer
may subside and let the Catbird do the rest.
The bird’s rage is remarkable, its fear painful.
Should the Owl be near to the Catbird’s nest it will
utter notes in a tone of voice I have never heard
it use on other occasions. It loses all fear of the
camera, and from the scolding perch screams at the
Owl with a vehemence which threatens to crack its
throat. One is glad to remove the offending cause.
Other birds in the vicinity are of course at-
tracted, and hasten to learn the meaning of the
uproar. Often a bit of undergrowth, of which the
Catbird was apparently the only feathered tenant,
will be found to possess a large bird population. It
is interesting to observe the difference in the actions
of various birds as they learn the reason of the dis-
turbance. On the whole, each species displays its
characteristic disposition in a somewhat accentuated
manner. The Blue-winged Warblers flit to and fro
for a few moments and then are gone; the Chestnut-
sided Warbler is quite anxious; the Maryland Yel-
low-throat somewhat annoved: the Ovenbird decid-
edly concerned; the Towhee bustles about, but
THE METHODS OF THE BIRD PHOTOGRAPHER 39
seems to pay no especial attention to the Owl; the
Wood Thrush utters its sharp pit-pit, but is con-
tent to let well enough alone if its own nest be not
threatened ; and the Yellow-throated, Red-eyed, and
White-eyed Vireos, particularly the latter, add their
complaining notes to the chorus of protests. Not
one, however, approaches the Catbird in the force
of its remarks, nor does the bird cease to outcry so
long as the Owl is visible.
It is felt that in the foregoing suggestions the
methods which may be employed by the bird pho-
tographer are very inadequately described, but, as
was remarked in the preface of this volume, the con-
stantly varying circumstances attending his work
practically prohibit duplication of experience.
In truth, herein lies the great charm of animal
photography. We have not to follow certain for-
mule, but each subject presents its own individual
requirements, making the demands on the natural-
ist’s skill and patience limitless and success propor-
tionately valuable.
BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY BEGINS AT TOME
HE influence exerted by the camera
in creating new values for the
bird student is perhaps nowhere
more evident than in the imme-
diate vicinity of one’s home.
Even the view from our windows
possesses fresh significance as we
speculate on the probability of securing a desirable
picture from this or that point of vantage, while
birds to which long familiarity has partially
dimmed our vision now become possible subjects
for our camera, and we find ourselves observing
their movements with an alertness before unknown.
In my own case, I have learned almost to tolerate
the House Sparrows, with which I have been at war
as long as memory serves me, for the pleasure found
in attempting to outwit these shrewd, independent,
impudent rats among birds; and, on closer acquaint-
ance, they prove such interesting subjects for study
that, if their vocal ability equaled their intelligence,
they might be as generally liked as they are hated.
So much for the magic of a sweet voice. As it is,
they possess a greater variety of notes than they are
generally credited with, and their conversational
powers undoubtedly exceed those of many accom-
40
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY BEGINS AT HOME 41
plished singers. In addition to the insistent, reiter-
ated chissick, chissick, which constitutes the song of
the male, one soon learns to recognize calls of warn-
ing, alarm, flight, battle, and the soft whistle which
the bird utters when it approaches its nest—the only
musical note in its vocabulary.
Quick to notice the slightest deviation from nor-
mal conditions, House Sparrows are difficult birds
20. ILlouse Sparrows and Junco,
to photograph. They seem to be constantly on the
watch for some sign of danger, and an unusual ar-
rangement of blind or shade at once arouses their
suspicions. After a heavy fall of snow, however,
hunger dulls the edge of their fears, and by scatter-
ing food near a suitable window the birds may be
decoyed within photographing distance.” It will be
found necessary, even then, to conceal the camera,
42 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
which they evidently distinguish from familar
pieces of furniture and regard with alarm.
This, too, is the best time to secure pictures of
Juncos,”! Chickadees, Nuthatches, Downy Woodpeck-
ers, Blue Jays, and less common winter birds. The
four last named are rarely or never seen about my
home in winter. Doubtless the abundant and sur-
rounding woodlands afford them a more congenial
haunt, from which they are not to be enticed by suet,
bones, or grain; or, more likely still, the custom of
putting out food for birds is so unusual in the region
about New York city that they have not yet learned
to expect it. It is a most pleasing surprise to the
21. Junco. x 3.
resident of this section to observe the numbers and
familiarity of winter birds in the environs of Boston,
where a feast seems spread for them in nearly every
do« oryard,
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY BEGINS AT HOME 438
To return to the Sparrow. The bird’s nest also
provides a focal point for the camera, but, as else-
where, the greatest
precautions must be
taken, and I have
succeeded in secur-
ing a picture only
when some advan-
tageously — situated
window afforded a
natural blind. One
of the pictures thus
obtained shows a
nest in the orna-
mental part of a
gutter, with the fe-
male looking from
an adjoining open-
ing.” This gutter
seems especially de-
signed to furnish
lodgings for Spar-
rows, and no ar-
gument that I have
g2, Female House Sparrow and nest. x 3.
thus far advanced has convinced them that it was
not erected for their use. During the early part
of their occupancy, a rap on their roof promptly
brought them out to perch in the branches of the
neighboring trees, where their chattering protest was
soon interrupted by a gunshot; but the survivors
quickly learned the meaning of the roof tap, and now,
without a moment’s pause, they dive downward from
their doorway and fly out of range at topmost speed.
44 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
More welcome tenants than the House Sparrows
are a pair of Screech Owls, who for years have
reared their broods in a dovecotelike gable, where
they are beyond the reach of nest robbers of all
kinds. During the winter they apparently are ab-
sent, nor indeed are they seen until June, when, each
evening at sundown, one of the pair, probably the
23. Sercech Owl, x 3.
male, takes his post at the entrance to its home and
gives utterance to the crooning refrain which some-
times follows the so-called tremulous “ screech.”
But the latter I never hear at this season. In spite
of the poor light prevailing at this hour, the bird’s
stillness has tempted repeated trials to secure its
picture, and the most successful, made with a four-
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY BEGINS AT HOME 45
teen-inch lens and an exposure of fifteen seconds, is
here shown.” Telephotos have thus far been under-
exposed,
Asa means of making the exposure as soon as
possible after the Owl appeared, I have on a num-
ber of occasions placed my camera in position, fo-
cused and otherwise made ready some minutes
before he was expected, and I recall with amusement
the incredulity of a friend whose surprise at seeing
me point my camera skyward without ostensible
- purpose was in no way lessened when I told him
that I had an appointment with an Owl, who was to
take his stand shortly in the hole toward which the
camera was directed; and fortunately the bird was
on time!
From the perch, some forty feet aloft, the grave
little creature surveys the scene below with an ex-
pression of combined wisdom and thoughtfulness
which makes a laugh seem wanton foolishness. At
the border of dusk and dark he flies out to feed,
often descending to the ground and remaining there
for some moments while catching insects. Occa-
sionally he takes his prey from the tree trunks, per-
haps a cicada struggling from its shell, and on sev-
eral occasions I have thought he captured food on
the wing. Sometimes the supper hunt leads him to
the edge of the croquet lawn, where from the earth
or the back of a garden bench he becomes an inter-
ested spectator of the last game. When the young
appear, later in the month, the evergreens seem alive
with Owls, who flit about and utter querulous little
calls difficult of description. Toward the end of
July, doubtless after the molt is completed, presum-
46 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
ably the adults—for never more than two are heard—
begin to sing; and this habit of post-nuptial singing
seems not to be confined to the Screech Owl, for
about this time the deep-toned, resounding notes of
the Barred Owl come up from the woods. Through-
out August and September the wailing whistle,
which is ever welcome for its spirit of wildness, is
heard nightly, and as the plaintive notes tremble on
the hushed air we invariably say, “ Hark, there’s
the Owl!”
My experience as bird photographer about home,
I must admit, has consisted chiefly in a series of en-
couraging failures which have borne no tangible
results. Let us hope, however, that the few pictures
here presented will prove as suggestive to the reader
as they are to their maker, who, although he offers
such inadequate proof in support of his belief, is far
too well convinced of the possibilities of home pho-
tography to go afield without saying at least a word
in its behalf.
THE CHICKADEE
A Study in Black and White
JuwRY early in my experience as a
| hunter I became acquainted with a
small black-and-white bird, who
not only announced himself with
unmistakable distinctness, but did
so at such close range that one
could form a very clear idea of his
appearance; and thus because of his notes and trust-
fulness I learned to know the Chickadee by name
years before I was aware that the woods were
tenanted by dozens of other more common but less
fearless birds.
With regret for the universality of the instinct,
I found that to see was to desire. I had felt exactly
the same longing in regard to other birds, and had
thrown many a stone in a fruitless effort to get pos-
session of the half-mysterious wild creatures which
always eluded me; but the Chickadee came within
range of my bean-shooter and soon paid the penalty
of misplaced confidence. The little ball of flesh and
fluffy feathers was perfectly useless, so after a day
or two, the length of time depending on the tem-
perature, it was thrown away.
My curiosity concerning the Chickadee being
satisfied, and the bird’s tameness making it too easy
47
48 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
a mark even for a bean-shooter, I entered on a new
phase of Chickadee relations. Strangely enough,
the killing of the bird seemed, from my point of
view, to constitute an introduction to a creature
which before I had known only imperfectly, and
my acquaintance with the Chickadee may be said
to have begun when I picked up the first bird that
fell before my aim. However the Chickadee may
have regarded my somewhat questionable manner
of gaining his friendship, he has since given unmis-
takable evidences of his approval of my treatment
of his kind. He always replies to my greeting, often
coming many yards in answer to my call, and on a
number of occasions he has honored me above most
men by ahghting on my hand.
When, in more recent years, the gun which suc-
ceeded the bean-shooter was in turn replaced by a
camera, I found that the Chickadee’s tameness made
him a mark for my later as he had been for my
earlier efforts in bird hunting. Now, however, I
believe I may speak for him as well as for myself,
and say that the results obtained are more satisfac-
tory to us both. It was in Central Park, New York
city, in February, 1899, that I went on one of my
first Chickadee hunts with a camera. Incidentally
the locality gave emphasis to the advantages of the
camera over any other weapon. Imagine the sur-
prise of the park police had I ventured on their pre-
cincts with a gun on my shoulder! But with a cam-
era I could snap away at pleasure without any one’s
being the wiser—many of my “snaps,” I confess
being attended by exactly this result. At this time,
through the efforts of an enthusiastic and patient
THE CHICKADEE 49
bird lover, who had improved on the bird-catching
legend by using nuts instead of “salt” and by sub-
stituting bill for “tail,” three Chickadees in the
Ramble had become so remarkably tame that they
would often flutter before one’s face and plainly
give expression to their desire for food, which they
took from one’s hand without the slightest evidence
of fear. Sometimes they even remained to pick the
nut from a shell while perched on one’s finger, anon
24, Chickadee on ground.
casting questioning glances at their host; but more
often they preferred a perch where they could give
their entire attention to the nut which was held
between their feet, and pecked at after the manner
of Blue Jays.
In spite of the ease with which one could ap-
proach these Chickadees, they made difficult marks
for the camera. I was armed with a “Henry Clay”
5x7 and a twin-lens camera of the same size, but
i)
50 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
so active were the little creatures that not one of
many exposures proved to be perfectly focused.
Finally I tried decoying the birds to a bone or bit
of bread in the bushes, but somehow they did not
25. Chickadee taking piece of bread.
succeed in discovering these baits until they were
placed on the ground." * Then they responded so
quickly that often the bread had disappeared while
my head was concealed by the dark-cloth, and fre-
quently, while focusing, the birds would alight on
the tripod of the camera. I was forced, there-
fore, to focus on a stone, and, when ready to make
the exposure, lay a bit of bread on or near the
focal point, the two pictures given being thus ob-
tained.
Various experiences with these unusually tame
birds finally led to what at first thought would have
been considered the wholly unreasonable ambition
of photographing one of them in my hand. The
camera was therefore erected at a suitable point and
THE CHICKADEE 51
focused on the trunk of a tree, the shutter set, and
slide drawn.
Now to get the bird. None was in the immedi-
ate vicinity, but a whistle soon brought a response
from some neighboring tree tops, and going beneath
them I shortly had called the bird down to a nut in
my palm, and with him on my finger started to walk
the eighty or more feet to the camera. This, how-
ever, was asking too much, and the bird abandoned
his moving perch for a bordering row of evergreens,
from which one or two more trials brought him
within a short distance of the desired spot, and rest-
;
26. A bird in the hand.
ing my arm against the tree trunk and with the
other hand on the trigger of the shutter I called
again the two plaintive notes. The bird’s faith was
still strong. Almost immediately he took the de-
52 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
sired position, when a click announced the realiza-
tion of a bird photographer’s wildest dream.
Fortunate is the bird photographer who discov-
ers an advantageously situated Chickadee’s nest.
Dr. Robert’s charming description in Bird-Lore of
his experience with a family of Chickadees stimu-
lated my desire to make a camera study of this spe-
cies. The first nest found, however, was claimed by
a band of roving boys, who in pure wantonness
pushed down the stub from which a few days later
the young would have issued.
A second time I was more fortunate. It was on
the morning of May 29, 1899, at Englewood, N. J.,
that in going through a young second growth I
chanced to see a Chickadee, who in arranging her
much-worn plumage gave unmistakable evidence of
having recently left her nest. At once I looked
about for a partly decayed white birch, a tree espe-
cially suited to the Chickadee’s powers and needs.
The bark remains tough and leathery long after the
interior is crumbling, and having penetrated the
outer shell the Chickadee finds no difficulty in exca-
vating a chamber within.
A few moments’ search revealed a stub so typical
as to match exactly the image I held in my mind’s
eye, with an opening about four feet from the
ground. The interior was too gloomy to enable one
to determine its contents, but, returning in half an
hour, I tapped the stub lightly, when, as though I
had released the spring of a Jack-in-a-box, a Chicka-
dee popped out of the opening and into a neighboring
tree. [ wished her good morning, assured her that
THE CHICKADEE 53
my intentions were of the best, and promised to
return and secure her portrait at the first oppor-
tunity.
Four days later I set up my camera before the
door to the Chickadee’s dwelling, and, without at-
tempting to conceal it, attached thread to the shutter
and retreated in the undergrowth to a distance of
about twenty-five feet.
After having had most discouraging experiences
with several birds, who had evidently regarded the
camera as a monster of destruction, and had refused
to return to their nests as long as the evil eye of the
lens was on them, it was consoling to find a bird
who had some degree of confidence in human nature
as represented by photographic apparatus.
It is true that the female—and throughout this
description I assume that the bird with much-worn
plumage was of this sex—promptly left the stub at
my approach; but when I retired to the undergrowth
there was no tiresome wait of hours while the bird,
flitting from bush to bush, chirped suspiciously, but
almost immediately she returned to her home.” The
camera was examined, but clearly not considered
dangerous, its tripod sometimes serving as a step to
the nest entrance. The click of the shutter, how-
ever, when an exposure was made as the bird was
about to enter its dwelling, caused some alarm, and
she flew back to a neighboring tree, and for some
time hopped restlessly from limb to limb.
The male, who had previously kept in the back-
ground, now approached, and, as if to soothe his
troubled mate, thoughtfully gave her a caterpillar.
She welcomed him with a gentle, tremulous flutter-
54 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
ing of the wings—a motion similar to that made by
young birds when begging for food. He, however,
made what appeared to be precisely the same move-
ments when she perched beside him.
: ae, eee It was not long
™ an § before the female be-
came so accustomed
to the snap of the
shutter that in order
to prevent her from
entering the nest I
was forced to rush
out from my hiding
place; but at last,
apparently becoming
desperate, she suc-
ceeded in returning
to her eggs in spite
of my best efforts to
prevent her.
There now ensued
a very interesting
change in the bird’s
action. It will be
remembered that at
, first she had left the
2%. Chickadee at nest hole, nest on hearing me
approach, while a
light tap brought her through the opening with
startling promptness. But now, evidently realizing
that a return to her duties of ineubation could
be made only at great risk, she determined under no
conditions to leave ler eggs. In vain I rapped at
THE CHICKADEE 55
her door and shook her dwelling to its foundations ;
no bird appeared, and not beheving it possible that
under the circumstances she would remain within
the stub, I felt that she must have left without my
knowledge, and there-
fore retired to await
her reappearance.
At the end of sev-
eral minutes the male,
with food in his bill,
advanced cautiously,
and clinging to the
rim of the nest open-
ing, hung there a mo-
ment and departed
minus the food. This
was surprising. Could
there be young in the
nest ? or was the bird,
in imitation of the
Hornbill, feeding his
imprisoned mate? I
rapped again, and this
time, perhaps taken
unawares, the female
answered my ques-
tion by appearing.
On June 3d a family arrived in the Chickadee
villa, and both birds were found actively engaged in
administering to its wants.
As areturn for the inconvenience to which they
had been subjected, a perch was erected by way of a
28. Chickadee at nest hole.
step at their door. The female was appreciative and
56 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
at once availed herself of this means of entering her
home.** The male, however, as before, was more
wary. He had braved the camera to bring food to
his mate, but his offspring had apparently not so
strong a claim upon him. He would fly off in search
of food and shortly return with a caterpillar, then
perch quietly for several minutes a few yards from
the nest, when, repelled by the camera and attracted
by the food in his bill, he yielded to temptation, de-
voured the caterpillar, vigorously wiped his bill, at
once started to forage for more food, and returned
with it only to repeat his previous performance.
Occasionally he uttered a low whistle, addressed
presumably to the female, and at times a chickadee-
dee-dee, which I interpreted as a protest to me, and
both notes were also uttered by the female.
The latter took so kindly to the doorstep that it
was determined to give her a door, and to this end a
leaf was pinned over the entrance to her home in
such a manner that it swung to and fro, like the
latch to a keyhole. This clearly did not meet with
her approval, and at first she seemed puzzled to ac-
count for the apparent disappearance of the nest
opening. But in less than a minute she solved the
mystery, pushed the leaf to one side, and disappeared
within.
Returning to the nest on June 12th, nothing was
to be seen of either parent, and I feared that they or
their offspring had fallen victims to the countless
dangers which beset nesting birds and their young.
Looking about for some clew to their fate, I found
on the ground, near the nest stub, the worn tail-feath-
ers of the female bird. The molting season had not
THE CHICKADEE 57
yet arrived, nor would she have shed all these feath-
ers at the same moment. There could therefore be
only one interpretation of their presence. Some foe
—probably a Sharp-shinned or Cooper’s Hawk, since
the predaceous mammals for the most part hunt at
night, when the Chickadee would be snugly sleep-
ing in her nest—had made a dash and grasped her
by the tail, which she had sacrificed in escaping.
TS a,
ers nesting site, showing reeds bent over nest. One of four
eggs cin be seen,
later the Bittern was found in full song—if the coo
be ifs song—in the marshes of Presque Isle in Erie
THE LEAST BITTERN 65
Bay ; but it must be confessed that a desire to secure
specimens of this, to me, strange bird left no oppor-
tunity to study its habits, and the species was not
again observed until June, 1898, in the northern
part of Cayuga County, New York. Here, under
the guidance of an observing local ornithologist,
Mr. E. G. Tabor, an encounter was had with a Least
Bittern which made a unique page in my experience
as a bird student.
It was on the border of Otter Lake, where the
Least Bitterns nest in small numbers in low bushes,
or a mass of drift, or more often in the fringe of cat-
tails. The trail of a boat through the reeds and
empty nests, which before had held from three to
five eggs, marked the ill-directed work of the boy
odlogists whose misspent zeal has resulted in such
a vast accumulation of eggshells and such an ab-
sence of information about the birds that laid them.
A visit to a more distant part of the lake, where
even thus early in the year the cat-tails were five
feet above water of over half that depth, saved the
day, as far as Least Bitterns were concerned. Pad-
dling close to the reeds, a practiced eye could dis-
tinguish the site of a Bittern’s nest, when the nest
itself was invisible, by the bowed tips of the reeds
which the bird invariably bends over it.** The object
of this habit is perhaps to aid in concealing the eggs
from an enemy passing overhead—a Crow, for exam-
ple—an attack by boat evidently not being taken
into consideration.
Certainly our appearance was in the nature
of a surprise to a pair of birds who had just
completed their platformlike nest and were appar-
6
66 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
52. Least Bittern’s nest; reeds parted to show eggs.
ently discussing future steps in their domestic
affairs.
As wo approached, the female, who even before
the eges are laid seems to have the home love more
strongly developed than the mate, bravely stuck to
THE LEAST BITTERN 67
her post, while the male marched off through the
reeds in the manner which has been described as so
remarkable. When he paused, with either foot
grasping reeds several inches apart or clung to a
single stalk with
both feet, he re-
sembled a gigan-
tic, tailless Marsh
Wren.
The actions of
the female were in-
teresting in the
extreme. Her first
move was an at-
tempt at conceal-
ment through pro-
tective mimicry—a
rare device among
birds. Stretching
her neck to the
utmost, she pointed
her bill to the ze-
nith, the brownish
marks on the feath-
ers of the throat be-
came lines which,
separated by the
white spaces be-
33. Least Bittern on nest mimicking its sur-
roundings.
tween them, might easily have passed for dried
reeds, and the bird’s statuelike pose, when almost
within reach, evinced her belief in her own invisi-
33 34
bility.
The pose recalled Hudson’s experience with a
68 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
wounded Least Bittern (Ardetta involucris, a near
relative of our bird) in the marshes of La Plata,
where a bird at his feet, in the same position as the
one before me, was discovered only after careful
search, and which, to the naturalist’s amazement,
slowly revolved as he walked around it, with the
presumable object
of keeping its pro-
tectively colored
breast turned
toward him.
My bird, how-
ever, Was among
fresh reeds, and
while one can not
doubt the effec-
tiveness of its at-
titude and color,
when seen among
dead reeds or
grasses, neither
were of value
among its green
34. Least Bittern on nest mimicking its sur gurroundings.
Ree With the light
on the wrong side and the reeds swaying violently
in the wind, we essayed to picture the bird, and the
best of several attempts made under these adverse
conditions are here given.
Covering my hand with my cap I held it toward
her, when, convinced that her little trick had failed,
she adopted new tactics, and struck at me with force
and rapidity, which made me thankful that my hand
THE LEAST BITTERN 69
was protected. Her bright yellow eyes glared with
the intensity of a snake’s, and her reptilelike appear-
ance was increased by the length and slenderness of
her head and neck. Her courage was admirable ;
she not only displayed no fear, but was actually
aggressive, and with a hissing hah struck viciously
at my hand each time it was placed near the nest.
As I quickly retreated on each occasion, and at
length made no further move toward her, she de-
cided to withdraw, perhaps to join her cautious mate,
who from the reeds had been uttering a warning tut-
tut-tut at intervals. Very slowly and watchfully she
left the nest, and when she had advanced a few feet
through the reeds I again ventured to touch her
platform home, putting my hand, however, under
it; but the motion instantly attracted her attention,
and, darting back to her post, she was on guard in a
moment. Then I left her, retirmg from the field
fairly vanquished in my first hand-to-bill encounter
with a wild bird. I hope she laid a full complement
of five eggs and from them reared five birds worthy
representatives of their mother.
A desire to renew my acquaintance with—or per-
haps I should say advances toward—this unbird-
like feathered biped, and to meet it under conditions
more favorable for the camera hunter, brought me
the following year (June 17, 1899), to the Montezuma
marshes at the head of Cayuga Lake. Here are
endless forests of cat-tails in which dwell not only
Bitterns, Long-billed Marsh Wrens, and Red-winged
Blackbirds, but also numbers of Pied-billed Grebes
and Florida Gallinules.
TO BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
There is a mystery about a marsh akin to that
which impresses one in a primeval forest. The pos-
sibilities of both seem limitless. One hears so much
and sees so little. Birds calling from a distance of
only a few yards may remain long unidentified. A
rustling in the reeds arouses vague expectations.
The notes of marsh-inhabiting birds are in keep-
ing with the character of their haunts. They are
distinctly wild and strange, and often thrilling. The
Rails, for example, all have singular, loud, startling
ealls. The American Bittern is a famous marsh
songster, but although several of his common names
are based on his calls, it is only recently that he has
actually been seen uttering them. The Gallinule re-
sembles the hen in the character, volume, and variety
of its notes, and to it and not the Clapper Rail
should be given the name “Marsh Hen.” Indeed,
its European relative, from which it can scarcely
be distinguished, is known as the Moor Hen or
Water Hen.
But of all this marsh music none to my ear 1s
more singular than the call of the Pied-billed
Grebe. It is mentioned in few books, and has won
the bird no such fame as the Loon’s maniacal laugh-
ter has brought him, though as a vocalist the Grebe
fairly rivals his large cousin. Like most bird calls
it is indescribable, but perhaps sufficient idea of its
character may be given to lead to its identification
when heard. It is very loud and sonorous, with a
cuckoolike quality, and may be written cow-cow-
cOW-COW-Cow-cow-cow-cow-cow-uh, cow-uh, cow-wh,
cow-uh, These notes vary in number, and are some-
times followed by prolonged wailing cows or ohs
THE LEAST BITTERN 71
almost human in their expressiveness of pain, fear,
and anguish.
This is the love song of the male, and when he
has won a mate she joins him in singing, uttering,
as he calls, a rapid cuk-cuk-cuk, followed by a slower
ugh, ugh, ugh, ugh.
The Gallinules were cackling in the reeds, where
a nest with three hatching eggs was found, but not a
ee
35, Young Red-winged Blackbirds.
bird was seen. Red-winged Blackbirds were chat-
tering with excitement as they guided the first wing
strokes of their young, who perched on the reeds
begged eloquently for food rather than for lessons
in flying.”
In a small island of cat-tails a pair of Grebes was
calling, and after the most careful stalking my com-
panion saw the female respond to the voice of her
mate.
"92 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
It was in this island—if a patch of cat-tails grow-
ing in three feet of water can be called an island—
that we found the first two of numerous Least Bit-
terns’ nests, and here our camera studies were made.
These nests were typical in form and site; one con-
tained five and the other four® eggs, from which
the birds had apparently departed as we pushed our
boat toward them.
Less than twenty minutes later we again passed
these nests and found, to our surprise, that in one
all four, and in the other two eggs had been punc-
tured, as if by an awl. Here was a mystery which
my companion, who was examining the second nest
while I was studying the first, quickly solved by
seeing a Long-billed Marsh Wren actually make an
attack on the remaining three eggs, and a little
later a bird of the same species—perhaps the same
individual, since the Bitterns’ nests were not more
than twenty yards apart—visited the first nest
to complete its work on the five already ruined
eggs.
Our attempt to photograph the energetic little
marauder failed, nor did we succeed in learning the
real cause of its remarkable destructiveness. How-
ever, the fact that in one nest alone it drove its
needlelike bill into all five eggs without pausing to
feast on their contents, would imply that it was not
prompted by hunger, and, much against our will, we
were forced to attribute the bird’s actions to pure
viciousness; though, it is true, there may have been
another side to the story, in which the Bittern was
the culprit.
The owners of the four eggs did not return while
THE LEAST BITTERN 73
36. Least Bittern eating her eggs.
we were present, and the following day we found
their nest empty—a mute protest against fate.
The female of the second nest discovered, in which
only two of the five eggs had been injured, proved to
be a bird of character.
74 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
While we waited in our boats at a distance of
fifteen feet, and with cameras erected on tripods
iV
ang
37. Least Bittern on nest.
at a third of the distance, she came walking through
the reeds uttering occasionally an explosive quoh !
THE LEAST BITTERN 15
After circling about us several times she climbed
to her nest, and at once proceeded to investigate the
condition of its contents. Soon she gave evidence of
the possession of both a philosophic and economic
disposition, not to mention other housewifely quali-
ties, notably cleanliness. Philosophy she exhibited
by making the best of things as she found them;
economy by carefully eating* the two broken eggs,
which a more thoughtless bird would have deserted
or quickly discarded; and cleanliness by carefully
dropping over the edge of the nest the shells remain-
ing from her peculiar feast, and following them by
bits of nest lining which had been soiled by portions
of the egg. This task accomplished to her satisfac-
tion, she gave further evidence of the possession of
a well-ordered mind by descending to the water,
washing her bill, drinking, and then returning to
her remaining three eggs, on which she settled
herself 2? as complacently as though she had met
with no loss, and there we left her in well-deserved
privacy.
TWO HERONS
N this age of death and destruction
to all living creatures, which, be-
cause of their size or edible quali-
ties, the so-called sportsman is
proud to exhibit as evidence of his
skill afield, it is remarkable that
there should exist within twenty
odd miles of New York’s City Hall
a colony of Herons which would do credit to the
most remote swamp of Florida,
Three factors have combined to render this rook-
ery possible: first, its isolation; second, the habits
of its occupants; and third, the protection which is
afforded it by the owner of the land on which it is
situated. Of these, the first is by far the most im-
portant, and I may be pardoned, therefore, if I do
not betray the birds’ secret; for, much as I desire to
encourage American industries, I must on this occa-
sion withhold information of undoubted value to
the feather trade.
The birds’ habits contribute toward their preser-
vation, because they are largely nocturnal, “ Night”
being the specific name applied by the text-books to
this particular kind of Heron; but to those who
know him in nature, he is generally spoken of as
“Quawk,” this being an excellent rendering of his
common call,
76
TWO HERONS ire
The Night Heron or Quawk belongs among the
birds for whom the setting sun marks the beginning
of a new day—a fact which protects him from man
and permits his existence in numbers where others
of his family are rarely seen. Doubtless many of
the residents of Heronville know their feathered
neighbors only as a voice from the night, which
comes to them when the birds, in passing over, utter
their loud and startling call.
Finally, to the protecting influences of a love for
seclusion and darkness must be added the unusual
position assumed by the proprietor of the land, who
will not permit any one to kill the birds, and,
stranger still, does not kill them himself!
Thus it happens that any day in May or June,
the months during which the Herons are at home,
one may leave the crowded streets of New York and
within an hour or so enter an equally crowded but
quite different kind of town.
If after leaving the train you secure the same
guide it was my good fortune to have, your way will
lead over shaded roads, pleasant fields, and quiet
woodland paths, and, if the sun is well up in the
trees, you may enter the outskirts of the rookery
and be wholly unaware, unless you approach from
the leeward, that between two and three thousand
Herons are within a few hundred yards of you.
One may gain a far better idea of Heron life,
however, by visiting the rookery while the foliage
is still glistening with dew. Then, from a distance,
a chorus of croaks may be heard from the young
birds as they receive what, in effect, is their supper.
Old birds are still returning from fishing trips, and
48 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
the froglike monotone of the young is broken by
the sudden quawks of their parents.
The rookery is in a low part of the woods which
evidently is flooded early in the year, a fact which
may have influenced the Herons in their selection
of the locality as a nesting site. At the time of
our visit the swamp maples, in which the nests are
placed, were densely undergrown with ferns, and
as we approached the whitened vegetation, which
clearly marked the limits of the rookery, a number
of Herons with squawks of alarm left the vicinity
of their nests, and soon the rookery was in an up-
roar. The common quaiwk note was often heard,
but many of the calls were distinctly galline in
character and conveyed the impression that we had
invaded a henroost.
The trees in which the nests were placed are very
tall and slender, mere poles some of them, with a
single nest where the branches fork; while those
more heavily limbed had four, five,** and even six of
the platforms of sticks, which with Herons serve as
nests, but in only a single instance was one nest
placed directly below another. A conservative count
yielded a total of five hundred and twenty-five nests,
all within a circle about one hundred yards in diam-
eter, nearly every suitable tree holding one or more,
the lowest being about thirty feet from the ground,
the highest at least eighty feet above it.
While the limy deposits and partially digested
fish dropped by the birds seemed not to affect the
growth of the lower vegetation, it had a marked
influence on certain of the swamp maples, the devel-
opment of the trees which held a number of nests
TWO HERONS "9
oy
being so retarded that, although it was June 13th,
they were as yet only in blossom.** The compara-
tive absence of foliage permitted one to have a far
better view of what was going on above than if
the trees had been thickly leaved, and on entering
lay? Cae
| ENO c
38. Five Herons’ nests in swamp maple, at an average height of seventy
feet. The upper right-hand nest with young shown in Nos. 41 and 42.
the rookery our attention was at once attracted by
the nearly grown Herons, who, old enough to leave
the nest, had climbed out on the adjoining limbs.
There, silhouetted against the sky, they crouched in
family groups of two, three, and four.”
Other broods, inhabitants of more thickly leaved
80 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
trees, made known their presence above by disgorg-
ing a half-digested eel, which dropped with a thud
at our feet and occasionally nearer, suggesting the
advisability of carrying an umbrella. The vegeta-
tion beneath the well-populated trees was as white
30. A view in the Heron rookery. looking upward from the ground to nests
and young, wbout eighty feet above.
as though it had been liberally daubed with white-
wash, and the ground was strewn with blue-green
eggshells neatly broken in two across the middle ;
fish, principally eels, in various stages of digestion
)
TWO HERONS s1
9
and decay; and the bodies of young birds who had
met with an untimely death by falling from above.
It was not altogether a savory place!
Seating ourselves at the base of an unoccupied
tree, we had not long to wait before the normal life
of the rookery was resumed. The young, who while
we were observed had been silent, now began to
utter a singular, froglike kik-kik-kik in chorus, and
40. Black-crowned Night Herons feeding. Telephoto, x 2 ut a distance of
about one hundred and fifty feet.
the old birds one by one returned. When food was
brought an increased outcry was heard from the
expectant youngsters about to be fed. At intervals
a resounding thump announced the fall of some too
eager bird, but, in the cases which we investigated,
the Heron, if fairly well grown, seemed to be little
the worse for his tumble of from fifty to seventy feet,
tod
‘
RY BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
and with lowered head ran through the undergrowth
with surprising quickness. With those which were
younger, however, the mortality had evidently been
ereat, and, seeing the dozens of dead birds on the
ground beneath the nest trees from which they had
$l. Young Night Herons in nest. Sime us No. 42.
fallen, one questioned whether this habit of nesting
high in trees had not, for protective reasons, been
recently acquired by a species the young of which
would seem much more at home nearer the ground.
It was with a delightful sense of companionship
with the birds that I observed them going and com-
ing, feeding their young, or resting after the night’s
TWO HERONS 83
labors, wholly undisturbed by my presence. Almost
I seemed to be a guest of the rookery, and I longed
for power to interpret the notes and actions of the
birds so abundant about me.
So I should like to have passed the day with
them, becoming for the time being a Heron myself;
42. Young Night Herons leaving nest. Nesting tree shown in No. 38.
but the desire to picture the birds was stronger than
the wish to be a Heron, and the situation was con-
‘sidered from the standpoint of the bird photog-
rapher.
The rookery proved to be a difficult subject. No
single view would convey an adequate idea of its
appearance, and I therefore selected representative
tree tops and photographed their nests and young
birds. A visit to a neighboring pond resulted in
st BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
securing, with the aid of a telephoto, a picture” of
two adult birds feeding well out of gunshot, and
with the assistance of climbers I reached the upper
branches of a tree some seventy feet in height con-
taining five nests whose contents ranged from eggs
to nearly grown young. With the ball-and-socket
clamp the camera was
fastened to favoring
limbs, and after three
hours’ work — several
satisfactory pictures of
young in the nest and
on the adjoining branch-
es were secured. Al-
though well able to de-
fend themselves, the
young assumed no such
threatening attitudes as
the American Bittern
strikes when alarmed,
from which perhaps we
may argue that they are
happily ignorant of the
dangers which — beset
their ground-nesting re-
43. Young Night Herons on branches lative.
hear nest, seventy feet from the As the sun crept up-
pies ward and the last fishers
returned, the calls of both old and young birds were
heard less and less often, and by ten o’clock night
had fallen on the rookery and the birds were all
resting quietly. Four o'clock in the afternoon was
evidently early morning, and at this hour the birds
TWO HERONS 85
first began to leave the rookery for their fishing
grounds. Some went toward the north, others to
the south, east-or west; each bird no doubt having
clearly in mind some favorite shore, perhaps a dozen
miles away, where he before had had good luck
a-fishing; and of all the varied phases of rookery life
the thought of this regular nightly expedition of
hundreds of winged fishers, is to me the most at-
tractive.
Our largest Heron as well as our largest bird is
the Great Blue. “Crane” he is popularly called;
but, aside from other differences, the bird’s habit of
folding its neck back on its shoulders, when on the
wing, will distinguish it from true Cranes, who fly
with neck extended to the utmost.
The Great Blue Heron is not edible, but its size
makes it a desirable prize to most gunners and it is
considered an especially fit mark for a rifle. The
temptation is strong to condemn as an outlaw the
man who kills one of these noble birds for what he
terms sport, or perhaps for the purpose of what he
would call having it “set up.” He, however, is act-
ing according to his light, which is quite as bright
as that which shines for most of his neighbors. The
Heron is exceedingly wild, and its capture is elo-
quent evidence of the hunter’s prowess, while his
desire to have its stuffed skin adorn his home is,
from his point of view, positively commendable.
That the bird is infinitely more valuable alive than
dead, that its presence adds an element to the land-
scape more pleasing to some than could be imparted
by any work of man, and that in depriving others
86 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
of the privilege of observing its singularly stately
grace of pose and motion he is selfish beyond expres-
sion, does not even vaguely oceur to this so-called
“sportsman,” who belongs in the class to whom a
majestic cliff isa quarry, a noble tree, lumber. Until
he has been educated to properly value the beauties
of Nature, or at least realize the rights of others in
them, he must be restrained by law, to the force of
which even he is not blind.
Only the Great Blue Heron’s extreme wariness
and habit of frequenting shores and marshes where
it can command an extended view of its surround-
ings has preserved it from extinction; but when
nesting it is compelled to visit woodlands where its
human enemies have better opportunities to ap-
proach it, and its only chance for safety during the
breeding season is to select a retreat remote from
the home of man. For this reason Great Blue Heron
rookeries are exceedingly uncommon in more settled
parts of the bird’s range, and north of Florida I
have seen their nests in only one locality.
It was the week after my visit to the Night
Herons that, in northern Cayuga County, New
York, I was led by a local ornithologist through one
of the heaviest pieces of timber I have ever seen
north of a primeval tropical forest, in search of a
Great Blue Heron rookery which he knew to exist,
and only my confidence in his woodsmanship gave
me courage to follow him over fallen trees and
through the season’s dense undergrowth, from which
our passage raised such a host of mosquitoes that
every step was a battle. If the vicious little insects
had lived only to protect the Herons, they could not
TWO HERONS 87
have disputed our progress more valiantly, and on
reaching the birds’ stronghold, where the compara-
tive absence of undergrowth deprived our winged
foes of shelter, I congratulated myself on what, for
the moment, seemed to be no insignificant feat.
The eleven nests which my guide had seen on a
previous occasion were found occupying their for-
mer positions, at least one hundred feet from the
ground in dead trees, one of which held five of the
eleven. During the many years which the birds
have nested in the place their number has not
varied, and one wonders what becomes of the from
thirty to forty young who doubtless each year leave
the parental trees. No other Herons of this species
are known to nest in the vicinity, and it is not prob-
able that the progeny of each year would seek a
nesting site in some far distant rookery; conse-
quently, as an alternative explanation, we can only
suppose that the yearly product of the rookery bal-
ances its losses by death.
The young birds were now nearly half grown,
but, unlike the Night Herons, they did not venture
outside their nests, from which they uttered harsh
croaks in evident supplication to their parents for
food. The sight of the trees in which the nests
were placed effectually controlled whatever ambi-
tions I had entertained toward camera studies at
short range, and I contented myself by making tele-
photos from the ground, in one of which an adult
bird and two nests, each with a young bird appear-
ing above its edge, may be seen.”
Time was lacking in which to observe these birds,
and the value of my visit to their retreat is not to
BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
RD
8
be expressed in words. The wildness of their home
seemed in perfect accord with their nature, and their
ae \ . i ta
P Fax V
- 4 Q
44. Looking upward from ground to nests and young and adult bird of
Great Blue Teron at a height of over one hundred feet. Telephoto.
apparent safety from intrusion brought a sense of
satisfaction which colors my memory of the whole
experience.
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST
RE ae =
ONTRIBUTING little to the ma-
*—#) terial wealth of the nation, the
‘| Hackensack marshes of north-
—_ “4 ern New Jersey are pena re-
garded as “waste land.’ By the
ese \ farmer they are termed “salt
a medders,” and their waving
grasses are of value to him only as “ bedding” for
cattle. In winter the muskrat hunter reaps a har-
vest of pelts there. The down of the “cat-tails” is
gathered for cushion stuffing, and the bladed leaves
for chair bottoms. To the gunner they are the
resort of Ducks, Snipe, Rail, and Reedbirds, which
each year visit them in decreasing numbers; while
to the thousands who daily pass them on the encir-
chng railroads they are barren and uninteresting.
But if beauty is a sufficient cause for being, then
these marshes may claim a right to existence.
In preglacial times this region was probably for-
ested, but now the forest is buried beneath the drift
of the glacier which deposited fragments of Palisade
and Orange Mountain trap rock on Staten Island.
During the depression of the land which occurred as
the ice gradually receded, the waters of the sea
doubtless passed up here and the meadow was a
larger “ Newark Bay.” Then commenced their slow
89
‘qsusNY Ul SoysIvUl yousuayovyy ‘cp
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 91
filling up by the silt brought down by the Hacken-
sack River. The river has preserved a right of
way, but the bay has given place to a sea of reeds
and grasses.
Ona bright August morning I mount a spur of
trap rock which reaches out from the western base
of the Palisades, and from this elevation have an
uninterrupted view over the meadows. The cool, in-
vigorating air foretells the approach of autumn; it
is brilliantly clear. The Orange hills stand out
with the distinctness of Western mountains. The
sun is at my back, and the light shows the meadows
to the best advantage. At this distance I get the
effect of only the masses of color; tracts of yellow-
ish green meadow grass tinged with copper, and in
places thickly sprinkled with the white flowers of
the water hemlock and water parsnip; streaks of
light green wild rice, and sharply defined areas of
dark green cat-tail flags. The grass grows on the
drier land, the wild rice in the small sloughs and
creeks which are bordered by the flags. In the
spring the wind blows the pollen from the cat-tail
blossoms, and a shifting greenish vapor floats over
the marsh; in the autumn a heavy westerly wind
raises the seed-bearing down high in the air, carries
it over the Palisades, across the Hudson, and it de-
scends like a fall of fleecy snow on wondering New
York,
The marsh is a vast arena inclosed by the Pali-
sades and Passaic hills; it isa great plain, with blue
stretches of the winding river appearing here and
there, and the haystacks are the huts of aborigines.
I half close my eyes, and it is a copper-yellow sea.
99 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
The grasses roll in undulating waves, capped by a
white crest of parsnip and hemlock blossoms; the
dark irregular patches of flags are the shadows of
clouds, the light streaks of wild rice are shoals, a
hovering Marsh Hawk isa Gull. A stately white-
winged schooner comes up the river; her hull is
hidden by the meadow grasses ; she is sailing through
the sea of my fancy.
This is an impressionist’s view of the meadows.
Now let us leave our rocky lookout and examine
them more in detail. The meadow we are leaving is
a meadow of all summer; the one we are approach-
ing is a meadow clad in all the glory of its August
flowers. One might think Nature was holding a
flower show here, so gorgeous is the display. The
railway track at the edge of the marsh is apparently
an endless aisle bordered by a rich exhibit of flowers.
Clusters of thoroughwort and purple loose-strife
grow so abundantly they give color to the fore-
ground, through which wild sunflowers make streaks
of gold. There are solid beds of purple asters on
the drier land, and delicate snow-white saggitarias
in the sloughs. Jewel flowers sparkle through the
flags, and convolvulus hangs from the reeds, its own
foliage scarce showing, or, growing with the fra-
grant climbing hempweed, it forms banks of dense
vegetation. The scarlet lobelia darts upward lke a
tongue of flame, startling in its intense brilliancy.
There are burnet, vervain, gerardia, and running
groundnut. But it is the marsh‘ mallow which,
more than any other flower, gives beauty to the
meadow. It grows here with wasteful luxuriance,
and the dark masses of flags serve as a frame for
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 93
this floral picture. Out in the marsh it grows in
equal profusion; the meadow is hung with small
pink lanterns, as if for a féte. A single flower of
the marsh mallow commands the attention of the
most unobservant, and when growing in abundance
it excites enthusiastic admiration.
46. Marsh mallows.
Nor is the animal life of the marsh less interest-
ing than its flora. Meadow mice nest beneath the
haycocks. Were it not for the minks and Hawks
which prey on them, they might become a scourge
throughout the surrounding country. Muskrats are
94 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
living in peaceful security in their snug summer
homes, hollowed from the banks of the streams.
They are the true villagers here, and pass the win-
ter in icy huts, ike Eskimos. Out in the grasses
Short-eared Owls are hiding. Their day begins
when the sun disappears behind the Orange hills;
then one may hear
the “quawk” of
the Night Heron.
Red-winged Black-
| | birds nest here, and
in the autumn they
gather in great
flocks and feed on
the wild rice.
Long-billed
Marsh Wrens —
small, nervous, ex-
citable bits — of
feathered life—are
abundant in the
flags, and to them
they attach their
large woven nests.
Except for a harsh,
scolding note they
are silent now, but
earlier in the year
the marsh is mu-
sical with their rip-
pling songs. The fervor of the love season over-
comes their fondness for the dark recesses of the
flags, and, singing, they rise into the air as if driven
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 95
upward by the mine of melody which explodes with-
in them.
Swamp Sparrows are common, and their clear
trill is one of the few August songs. Bobolinks,
traveling in disguise and under the assumed name
of “ Reedbird,” pause here to feed on the ripening
wild rice.” Some of them have not yet completed
their change of costume and appear in a spotted suit
of black and yellow. Occasionally one hears a sup-
pressed burst of the “ mad music ” of June, but their
common note is a metallic chink. At night this
note is heard from high in the air, as the birds con-
tinue their journey to the cultivated rice fields of
South Carolina and Georgia, there to remain until
September or October, when they leave for their
winter home south of the Amazon.
The Sora Rails, beloved of sportsmen and epi-
cures, are also attracted to the marshes by the wild
rice. On their arrival in early August they are in-
deed “as thin as a rail,’ but an abundance of food
soon rounds their bodies into comparative plump-
ness. The ist of September is a black day in their
calendar. Then they are outlawed, a price is set on
their bodies, and at high tide each day during this
sad month one sees numerous puffs of smoke arise
from the tall grasses and dull reports come boom-
ing over the marsh with fateful frequency.
But the characteristic birds of the marshes at this
season are Swallows. They outnumber many times
all the rest of the marsh birds together—in fact, are
present in such myriads that their gatherings are
one of the most interesting and impressive phenom-
ena of the bird life of this region.
96 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
Five species are represented. Named in the or-
der of their abundance they are the Tree, Bank,
Barn, Eave, and Rough-winged Swallows. The last
are comparatively rare, while the Tree Swallows are
so in excess of all the species named that the follow-
ing remarks relate largely to them alone.
Although Tree or White-breasted Swallows nest
locally throughout North America, from the table-
land of Mexico to Labrador and Alaska, there are
but few instances of their breeding in the lower
Hudson River valley, where they appear only as
migrants or transient visitants. They arrive from
the south early in April, and their northward migra-
tion is not concluded until about June Ist. During
June they are rarely seen, but between the Ist and
the 5th of July they begin their journey to their
winter homes—a movement which inaugurates the
fall migration.
This stage of their journey takes them only to
certain marshes, which become stations on their line
of travel where countless numbers of their kind,
impelled by the flocking impulse, gather to roost
in the reeds. Their numbers increase steadily
through July and August, the maximum of abun-
dance being reached about September Ist ; then they
gradually become less numerous, and by October 10th
comparatively few remain, though if the weather be
favorable, they may be observed daily until late in
the month.
Throughout this period—from July to October—
the marsh is used only as a dormitory, the reeds evi-
dently offering suitable perches to these weak-footed
birds, who in the morning radiate throughout the sur-
WIERE SWALLOWS ROOST 97
rounding country and in the evening return to the
marsh to sleep. In the evening they fly low, and
the altitude and time of their flight make them con-
spicuous. In the morning they fly high, as though
bound to some distant feeding ground, and at so
early an hour that they usually escape observation.
The evening flight, therefore, is generally considered
=e
48. “ Bird notes "— Tree Swallows.
as truly migratory, when, in fact, the same birds
doubtless pass over a given locality night after
night, perhaps for weeks, in returning to their
roosts in the marshes.
These evening flights begin about two hours and
a half before sunset, when the birds, after resting
during the late forenoon and early afternoon, usu-
ally on some telegraph wire,* begin to wheel and
8
98 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
circle over the fields in pursuit of their evening
meal, when one might imagine they were resident
birds, but observation will show that the general
trend of their movement is toward the roost.
This continues for an hour to an hour and a half,
a cloudy evening hastening their actions, when their
flight becomes more direct. Few birds pause to feed,
but hurry on to the roosting places, and as the light
fades the last birds rush through the gloom with
arrowy speed and directness. The birds pass in
straggling flocks, and periods of abundance are suc-
ceeded by intervals of scarcity, as though the indi-
viduals which had been associated during the day
were journeying home together.
Thus the Swallow’s evening flight may be ob-
served throughout the region surrounding the
marshes ; even in New York city they may be seen
feeding above the houses, and after sunset flocks of
swift-flying birds are often confused by the tele-
graph wires, which, however, their dexterity of wing
permits them to pass without serious harm.
In the marshes the first birds are seen about two
hours before sunset. Many follow the course of the
river, and if one be at its border splash after splash
is heard as the birds dip lightly into the water, fol-
lowed by soft fluffs as arising from the stream they
shake their plumage. Soon the air is filled with
Swallows, all streaming toward the roost with in-
creasing swiftness.
Many birds, however, as though waiting for some
tardy comrades, rest by the way, perching on tele-
graph wires should they cross the marsh, or when
these are wanting, on the tips of the reeds. They
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 99
invariably face the wind, and when it is from the
west the last rays of the sun striking their white
breasts make them appear like snowy flowers crown-
ing the reeds. Suddenly, with a rush, they whirl
onward to the roost.
Thus far the exact location of this roost has de-
fied my search. I have, however, roughly defined
the bounds of that section of the marsh in which it
is placed by observation stands at which the Swal-
lows flew north and south respectively, and some-
where between the two I still hope to discover the
Swallows’ sleeping haunts.
The following description of their departure
from the marshes in the morning is abstracted from
my journal, under date of August 15, 1886: “ A cool,
clear morning, with a light northwesterly wind. I
reached the marshes shortly before five o’clock,
when they appeared to be deserted, not a Swallow
being in sight. At two minutes of five the first
birds were observed, then flock after flock they
came until at five the air was filled with hurrying
forms, flying at varying altitudes toward the
north.
“Suddenly, from the meadows near me there
arose a vast cloud of Swallows, doubtless birds
which had come from farther south in the marsh
before my arrival. Steadily they mounted upward,
until having attained a height where with a strong
glass they appeared faint dots against the sky, they
slowly winged their way northward.
“ All the time the meadows were alive with birds
feeding in every direction; gradually they passed to
the north, when another huge flock arose from the
100 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
marsh, and after gaining an immense height disap-
peared, this time toward the east.
“As the sun rose over the Palisades few birds
were on the wing, but great flocks were perched in
the reeds on the banks of the creek, and as in my
canoe I drifted slowly
up to them, they seemed
unmindful of my pres-
ence, when, as though at
a signal, they arose as
one bird, and after hov-
ering lightly overhead
returned to the reeds.
“The tide was low,
and along the shore sev-
eral Sora Rail were feed-
ing, and, as carried by
the tide I floated noise-
lessly by, they paused in
their search for food, and
with tails upraised re-
garded me with evident
astonishment. A mink
approached the shores of
a small inflowing stream,
hesitated, then plunged
49, Tree Swallows in tree.
in, crossed, and disap-
peared in the tall grasses on the opposite side. The
air was vocal with the calls of Red-winged Black-
birds, the chink of Bobolinks, and the rattle of
Swamp Sparrows.
“On a reed-grown point below was another great
army of Swallows. With surprising regularity a
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 101
detachment left it every fifteen minutes; thus, birds
left at 6, 6.15, 6.30, and 6.45, when the reeds were
deserted. The departing birds did not arise alone,
but the entire flock arose at once, then divided into
two flocks, one of which flew northward while the
other returned to the reeds. Many of the departing
birds alighted on the reeds farther up the creek;
their numbers constantly received additions from
the ranks of passing birds, and thus new flocks were
formed.
“ At eight o’clock the last Swallows had left the
reeds in my vicinity, but birds were constantly pass-
ing toward the north, and this straggling flight con-
tinued until nine o'clock, when again the marshes
appeared deserted.”
Subsequent observations have been made largely
from a road crossing the marsh, the telegraph and
electric-light wires which border it being the resting
place of vast numbers of Swallows, both at night
and in the morning. Particularly do they throng
the wires near the creek, which flows north and
south through the marsh, and which, it is inter-
esting to observe, forms a natural highway for the
Swallows as they go to and from their roosts.
On the sides of this road are several small maple
trees, to which the Swallows often resort in such
numbers that their foliage trembles as though in a
strong breeze, it not being the birds’ object to perch
in the trees, but to flutter among the dew-laden
leaves, and apparently bathe in the moisture they
contain, while between the baths they rest on the
smaller terminal twigs, when they are very difficult
‘arid qnoqe suyunyg qsoU PUB OITM UO SMO[[VAG 9017, “OG
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 103
to observe.” This habit does not appear to have
been previously recorded, and I am by no means
certain that the explanation offered is the true
one.
Frequently one or more flocks, varying in size
from eight or ten to several hundred’ birds, may be
seen in the road, where I at first supposed they were
“dusting,” but soon noticed that most of the birds
after alighting in the road were motionless. They
did not move about as though searching for food,
but occasionally the actions of a pair enabled one
apparently to determine the sex of each individual,
and more often a bird would pick up a bit of dried
grass and fly up into the air with it. Sometimes it
was carried fifty yards or more and then dropped ;
at others, the birds would carry it to the telegraph
wires above, and drop it after perching a moment.
Without exception, all the birds seen to alight in the
road were in the dull, immature plumage of birds of
the year, and in their actions, as Mr. William Brew-
ster has remarked (The Auk, 1898, p. 194), they evi-
dently gave a premature exhibition of the procrea-
tive and nest-building instincts.”
Additional evidence of the possession of inher-
ited knowledge was apparently given by many Tree
Swallows, who were frequently seen hovering about
a pile standing in the creek.” At first it was sup-
posed that these birds were feeding on insects which
had alighted on the pile; but the number of birds—
often a dozen or more—seen fluttering about it, and
the persistency with which they remained there,
forced the conclusion that in a wholly unreasoning
way they were looking for a nesting site.
104 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
Swallows are not known to migrate by night,
and, so far as I am aware, no single Swallow has
ever been found among the thousands of night-
flying birds which have perished by striking light-
houses. The Swallows, therefore, when migrating
51. Immature ‘free Swallows gathering nesting material.
probably leave the marsh during the day, but in
what manner who can say ?
Several times when crossing the marshes on the
cars I have observed gatherings of Swallows which
made the iminense flocks observed daily in August
WHERE SWALLOWS ROOST 105
and September seem little more than a family of
birds. They appeared in the distance like a vast
swarm of gnats; 1t was as though all the Swallows
in the marsh had collected in one great storm of
birds. The significance of this movement I have
never had the fortune to determine, but it seems
highly probable that it is connected with the inau-
guration of an actual migration toward the birds’
winter quarters.
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS
=
4
ERNS are useless for food, and can
{ not therefore be classed as “ game
} birds.” So far as we know they
are of no special economic value.
Consequently, when one protests
against their practical annihila-
eee tion for millinery purposes, he is
not infrequently answered: “ Well, what good are
they ?” The question exposes so absolute a failure
a re
to appreciate the bird’s exquisite beauty and unex-
celled grace—such a discouraging materialism—that
one realizes the hopelessness of replying.
I confess IT find it impossible to describe satisfac-
torily just what the presence of Terns along our
coast means to me. It is not alone their perfection
of color, form, and movement which appeals to one,
but also the sense of companionship they bring; and
doubtless this feeling is emphasized by the impres-
sive loneliness of the sea, which makes anything
alive doubly welcome. And so the coming of a
single one of these beautiful creatures changes the
character of the bay or shore. With unfailing
pleasure one watches its marvelously easy flight, its
startling darts for its food of small fish, and when
it disappears the scene loses a grateful element of
life.
106
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 107
A milliner’s hunter or fisherman, however, might
have made a very different reply to the unimagina-
tive individual who asked the value of Terns. The
former would have told him that they were worth
about ten cents each for hat trimmings; the latter
would have said that their eggs made excellent
omelets; and each has done his best—the one to
lay all Terns on the altar of Fashion, the other
to see that none of their eggs escaped the frying
pan.
In the meantime a number of bird lovers have
taken up the battle for the Terns in their few re-
maining strongholds, and the brief history of Tern
destruction and protection is full of suggestive in-
cidents.
It was about twenty years ago that Terns first
found favor in woman’s eyes, and during the few
succeeding years hundreds of thousands of these
birds were killed on the Atlantic coast for milliners.
Cobb’s Island, on the coast of Virginia, is credited
with having supplied forty thousand in a single
season, and, as one of the killers recently confessed
to me that he knew of fourteen hundred being killed
in a day, the story is doubtless true. Their delicate
white and pearl-gray feathers were, of course, badly
blood-stained; but” good and bad, the skins were
washed and then thrown into a barrel of plaster,
which was rolled up and down the beach until the
moisture was absorbed from their plumage. A
Long Island taxidermist used a patent churn for
this purpose.
The destruction at other favorable points was
proportionately great, and in two or three years one
108 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
looked in vain for the Terns which had previously so
enlivened our shores.
The protection afforded by an insular existence
was now given a practical and striking illustration.
The Terns which nested on the mainland or near-
lying sand bars were soon extirpated, but on cer-
tain less accessible, uninhabited islets, they still sur-
vived,
Thus all that were left of countless numbers of
these birds which once inhabited the shores of Long
Island were to be found on the Great Gull Island,
while Muskeget and Penikese, off the Massachusetts
coast, contained the only large colonies of Terns
from Long Island to Maine. The existence of the
Gull Island colony being threatened by collectors,
the influence of several bird lovers secured the ap-
pointment of the keeper of the lighthouse on the
neighboring islet, Little Gull, as a special game
warden to enforce the previously useless laws sup-
posed to protect the Terns.
The result was both encouraging and instructive.
In two years it is estimated that the colony increased
from two thousand to four thousand, and it was hoped
that it might prove a nucleus from which the ad-
joining shores would eventually be restocked with
Terns, But the Government at Washington selected
Great Gull Island as a desirable point for fortifica-
tions, and before even this suggestion of war the
poor Terns disappeared. For one season the labor-
ers employed by the Government feasted on Terns’
eggs; then the gradual occupancy of the eighteen
acres composing the islet forced the birds to seek
homes elsewhere.
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 109
Hence it follows that if one would see Terns in
numbers on the middle Atlantic coast to-day, he
must journey to two small islets off Massachusetts,
which thus far have afforded them a refuge. Inter-
esting it is to recall that on Martha’s Vineyard, lying
between the two, are found the only lving repre-
sentatives of the Heath Hen, or Eastern Prairie
Hen, which was once locally abundant in certain
parts of the Hastern and Middle States.
In 1889 I visited the Terns of Great Gull Island,
and a desire to be again surrounded by these birds,
and perhaps secure photographs of them and their
way of living, brought me on July 16, 1899, to
Wood’s Holl, Massachusetts, e7 route to whichever
Tern headquarters it might prove most convenient
to reach.
Quite unexpectedly there proved to be a small
colony of Common and Roseate Terns on three islets,
known as the Weepeckets, standing in Buzzard’s
Bay, near the entrance to Wood’s Holl. In all, there
were probably between three and four hundred
birds, of which by far the greater number appeared
to be domiciled on the largest of the three islands.
This contains from ten to twelve acres of sand,
grown with beach grass, scrub sumach, bayber-
ries, and a few stunted pines about two feet in
height.
On this apparently uninviting bit of land I passed
two delightful days alone with the Terns. The ac-
companying photographs tell far more of the birds
than pen can well express, but they convey no sug-
gestion of the pleasure I experienced in again finding
myself among them,
110 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
The birds were nesting on the upland, on the
sloping grass bank, on the northwest side of the is-
land, and on the rocky beach” at its base. In the two
first-named locations most of the nests were lned
with grasses, but occasionally they consisted of only
52. Nesting site, nest, and three eggs of Common Tern. A nearer view of
nest with sitting bird is shown in Nos. 68 and 64.
a slight, bared depression in the earth; while the
eges along the beach were, as a rule, deposited on
wisps or piles of driftweed. There were perhaps six
or cight Roseate Terns, the others were apparently
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 111
all Common Terns, but as Iam unfamiliar with the
very similar Arctic Tern, it is possible that this
species may have been present.
A Tern colony is in some respects a unit. The
alarm of one bird is shared by all, and before the
boat’s keel grated on
the sandy beach of the
largest Weepecket, the
snowy - breasted birds,
which in a group were
resting there, had taken
flight, and with their
singular call told all the
other Terns on the is-
land of my invasion.
At once the birds gath-
ered and, hanging in a
flock’ overhead, pro-
tested most vigorously
against my intrusion with their purring, vibrant
te-a-r-r-r. This cry never ceases so long as one
remains near their home; it rings in the ears for
days afterward, and one need only to recall it to
form a clear mental picture of a sky full of hov-
ering Terns. Occasionally this monotone was punc-
tuated by a loud, reedy cack as a Roseate Tern
dashed by, or as some half-distracted bird, whose
nest was doubtless near, screaming, dived close to
my head with a sudden, startling swish. It seemed
almost as though the bird would pierce me with its
sharply pointed bill; and if it could have managed
to go through the rim of my hat without damage to
either of us, I should have been very glad to have
53. Tern hovering above nest.
112 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
sacrificed that article of apparel to such an exhibi-
tion of bravery.
As Tadvanced I began to discover nests. Some
were on the upland, snugly placed in the grass or
near a large stone, and with pretty surroundings of
yarrow, sumach, or bending grasses; others were on
the little shelves of the steep westerly bank of the
islet; and others still on bits of seaweed among the
pebbles and rocks which here formed the beach.”
No attempt was made
to take advantage of
the concealment of-
fered by the groups
of bowlders scattered
along the beach, and
beneath which the
birds might have hid-
den effectively, it be-
ing presumably their
object to select a
site from which they
could readily detect
any cause for alarm.
As a rule, their nests
54. Nest and eggs of Tern on upland.
contained one or two
eggs, only a single nest being seen with three.
Although by this time birds of the year should
have been on the wing, few young of any age were
seen—a condition which was doubtless explained by
the fact that the birds, thus far, had been too much
occupied furnishing the members of boating parties
with souvenirs of their day’s outing, to give atten-
tion to their own household affairs.
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 113
However, the few young that were seen gave
a most interesting exhibition of their instinctive
appreciation of the value of both their protective
colors and the power of their legs. As long as they
55. Tern’s nest and eggs in drift débris.
believed themselves unobserved they trusted in the
former; but the moment they became convinced that
a further attempt at concealment was useless, they
transferred their faith to their pedal extremities, on
which they pattered off as far and as fast as their
strength permitted. This observation was verified
later on Penikese,” where young were numerous, and
the habit was well shown by the young bird figured.”
He was discovered squatting among the rocks, where
he remained, practically at my feet, while I set up
my tripod and deliberately made his picture—during
which operation so inconspicuous was he that I in-
variably had to hunt for him each time I removed
my eyes from the exact spot in which he was crouch-
ing. Wishing now to show him to better advantage,
he was picked up and placed on a wisp of drift-
9
114 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
weed, At once his manner changed. My touch had
broken the spell; what could be felt could be seen,
and, whereas before he had been as motionless as the
pebbles about him,’ his one object now was to get
out of sight as speedily as possible. Consequently,
time after time, the moment I took my hand from
him he was off, and it was only by squeezing the
bulb the moment he was released that I succeeded
finally in securing his picture on the seaweed.
Young Terns, apparently, spend at least two
days in the nest, during which time they are brooded
by the parents; then they wander about within a
limited space seeking the shade of a stone or bit
of driftwood, always of course under the parental
care, At Penikese, young of the year were seen on
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 115
the wing, and the series of pictures shown represents
the stages of growth from the egg to the age at
which the bird takes flight.
Both the nature of the bird’s haunts and the
manner in which the members of a colony spread an
alarm make it practically impossible to surprise a
57. Young Tern hiding in the grass.
Tern upon its nest. But by lying prone upon the
ground one attracts far less attention than when
standing. The hovering flock of birds gradually
disperses, and those which are incubating soon re-
turn to the vicinity of their nests, hanging over
them and dropping nearer and nearer,” until at the
end of fifteen or twenty minutes they swoop down
beside them, raise their wings high over their backs,
then fold them gently and settle upon their eggs.*
On a second visit ‘to the island a bit of old sail
was brought, which I drew over me when lying on
the ground—a plan resulting in my practical disap-
pearance, as far as the Terns were concerned,
116 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
Obviously the only manner in which photographs
of the Terns on their nests could be secured was to
conceal one’s camera near the nest and retire, with a
tube or thread, to a distance of a hundred feet or
more. A nest was therefore selected about halfway
up the bank on the westerly side of the island, the
camera staked to the ground with long iron pins,
and completely covered with the dried seaweed
abundant on the beach below. I then attached a
6s. ‘Torn alighting on nest. Same nest as Nos, 60-62,
black linen thread to the shutter and retired about
one hundred feet to the top of the bank. Almost as
soon as IT lay down the tumult overhead ceased, the
birds scattered, and the rasping fe-a-r-r-r note of
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 117
alarm was replaced by a variety of calls, showing
these birds to be possessed of an unexpectedly ex-
tended vocabulary. One call was a chirp not unlike
59. Tern on hillside nest.
the White-throated Sparrow’s, a second might be
written twe, twe, twe, and was uttered when one bird
was in pursuit of another.
The seaweed not only concealed the camera per-
fectly, but was so abundant near the bird’s nest that
the appearance of a fresh mound apparently did not
even excite the bird’s curiosity, and within twenty
minutes it had returned to its eggs. It happened,
however, that the nature of the site chosen induced
the bird to face the water, and as the camera was
above, and consequently behind it, the view pre-
sented did not show it to advantage, but after sev-
eral unsuccessful trials the attempt to secure a more
flattering view was abandoned.”
A bird was now chosen who was incubating two
eges placed in a depression in a little mound of sea-
weed on the beach, On this occasion the camera was
118 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
placed on a driftwood box, weighted with stones,
and completely covered with seaweed. These eggs
were hatching, and the bird soon returned to them ;
but before it had come back, another bird in darting
60. Tern’s nest and hatching eggs in seaweed.
by had flown into the thread, springing the shutter,
and making the picture”
of the nest and eggs here
given quite as effectively as many a similarly inex-
perienced photographer could have done.
The day but one following—July 20th—these egg-
shells had disappeared, and the nest was occupied
by two young birds with just enough strength to
crawl toward the parent bird when it appeared with
food." And when their appetites were appeased the
parent bird took her place on the nest and brooded
them with the care of an anxious hen.”
A few yards from this new family were two
young who could not have been over four days old,
but who had left the nest for the shade of a piece of
driftwood. Here they were fed by two birds—doubt-
less both parents—whom they seemed to recognize
among the other Terns hovering above them. They
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 119
were apparently fed on small fish, which the parent
bird placed in their open mouths while standing just
within reaching distance. None of the several pic-
tures of these birds were wholly successful, but in
61. Tern about to feed young. Same nest as No. 60.
all of them the old birds seem to be much more
graceful in form than the parent of the newly
hatched young in the seaweed.
A less experienced Tern had placed its nest of a
few bits of seaweed among the pebbles, almost
within reach of the waves. This bird was singu-
larly restless, turning its head from side to side
so constantly that its picture was secured only by
pulling the long thread the moment after the bird
moved. Like all the birds photographed on the
120 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
nest, it showed no alarm at the click of the shutter
as the exposure was made. This surprised me not
a little. The camera was usually about three feet
from the bird, the exposure was necessarily rapid
(x's second and stop 8), the snap of the old-style
“Henry Clay,” used on the first day, or even of the
less loud Iris diaphragm, could be plainly heard at
a distance of several yards, and its failure to startle
these nervous, easily frightened birds makes one
suspect that their hearing is deficient.
The nests of the Terns that chose the upland for
a home were often picturesquely surrounded by
stunted sumach or blooming yarrow, but the birds
here were far less easy to photograph because of
‘ 62. Tern brooding young. Same nest as No. 60,
the difficulty of thoroughly concealing one’s camera.
The owner of an especially pleasing nesting site kept
me beneath my bit of sail for somewhat over two
hours, while she—if it was she—hung in the air just
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 121
63. Tern on nest. Site shown in No. 42.
over her eggs, on which I momentarily expected
to see her settle.”
In the meantime the tide had arisen and floated
my boat, which was carried by the wind across to
Naushon, and I might
have passed the night
with the Terns, had
not the Fish Commis-
sioner’s launch taken
me off in the afternoon.
It would not have
been an unwelcome ex-
perience. There was
an abundance of dry
seaweed for a couch—
a nest, I had almost
said—and some cavern-
like openings beneath
the piles of great bowl-
ders had a very snug and cozy look, which prob-
ably would have disappeared shortly after sunset.
64. Tern on nest. Site shown in No. 52,
199 BIRD STUDIES WITIL A CAMERA
Two days later I went to Penikese, and my domi-
nant thought on recalling the experience is an in-
tense desire to repeat it. Penikese, or at least its
northern part, is an island of Terns. On the rocky
beach, from which the sides of the bank lead to the
65. Tern on upland nest.
rolling upland above, whichever way I looked was
a Tern’s nest with its two, or, rarely, three eggs.
Less frequently young Terns were seen, varying in
age from those just emerging from the shell to
others almost ready to fly, while overhead was a
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 123
countless multitude of hovering, darting Terns,
whose voices united in one continuous, grating
te-a-r-r-r made the air tremble. There was an occa-
66. Young Terns; first stage, about four days old.
sional vibrant cack from a Roseate, but not more
than a dozen birds of this species were heard. Asked
to estimate the number of birds present I should
have said ten thousand, though I should not have
been surprised to learn that there were twenty thou-
sand. However, Mr. George H. Mackay, of Nan-
tucket, who may be regarded as a Tern specialist,
placed the number of Terns on Penikese, in 1896, at
“six or seven thousand,” and with the assistance of
Mr. R. H. Howe, Jr., counted 1,416 nests containing
2,055 eggs (Auk, xiv, 1897, p. 283).
A small flock of sheep shared this part of the
island with the Terns, and their presence accounted
for the short grass which made the upland resemble
a closely cut lawn, and permitted one readily to see
124 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
the Tern’s eggs when several yards distant. For
the same reason the birds could be seen even more
67. Young Tern, about a week old.
6s. Young Term; third stage, second plumage appearing.
plainly, and my most pleasing memory of Penikese
is the greensward dotted with the white forms of
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 125
a
breeding birds, who had returned to their nests after
T had partially concealed myself behind a bowlder.
In or near the nests many dead young birds were
seen, The cause of their death was not evident,
unless it may be attributed to the unguarded foot-
steps of the grazing sheep. If this be true, the
parent birds seemed in no way to resent the sheep’s
carelessness, but accepted their presence without
69. Young Tern, fourth stage.
protest; one bird even exhibited a sign of good
fellowship by perching on a sheep’s back, and the
length of time it remained there showed that it was
by no means an unwelcome visitor.
My time on Penikese was too short to more than
show what an admirable opportunity is here offered
the ornithologist who desires to make a close study
of the home life and social relations of Terns. The
126 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
present owners of the island, the Messrs. Homer, of
New Bedford, take a greatly to be commended inter-
est in the welfare of their feathered tenants, and,
through posters and the agency of their representa-
tive on the island, aim to afford the birds a much-
needed protection.
What an enviable possession! What a privilege
to be able to give a refuge to so large a propor-
70, Young ‘Tern, stage before flight.
tion of the remaining survivors of these persecuted
birds!
With no desire to underrate the services to the
Commonwealth of these gentlemen, I still could wish
the Terns more stable protectors. Not the State,
TWO DAYS WITH THE TERNS 127
whose record as a Tern protector does not invite our
confidence, but a society of bird lovers—the Nuttall
Club of Cambridge, or the Audubon Society of Mas-
sachusetts. Would it not be a fitting act for one of
these organizations to ask from woman, the Tern’s
chief enemy, contributions to a fund for the pur-
chase of an asylum for her victims. Can no one so
plead the Terns’ cause that many a feather-bedecked
woman will be glad to send her conscience money
to aid in securing their protection ?
But in addition to being a home of the birds,
Penikese has other claims upon Nature lovers.
Here Agassiz, through the medium of his summer
school, brought his pupils into direct contact with
Nature, and the scene of his labors is fraught with
associations to every one familiar with the inspiring
history of his life. Let us keep this island sacred to
his memory and the Terns.
THE BIRD ROCKS OF THE GULF OF
ST. LAWRENCE
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE
Syren oot aT Ey
i‘ pi} i,
( HE naturalist realizes with the ut-
» most sadness that the encroach-
ments of civilization are rapidly
changing the conditions of animal
life on this small sphere of ours,
and that soon he may find Nature
3) primeval only in its more remote
6 ps 2
SUS
or inaccessible parts.
Forest life vanishes with the demand for timber,
which sends the axeman in advance of the agricul-
turist. The tillable plains, prairies, and bottom
lands are transformed by the plow. The sandy
beaches suffer with an eruption of summer hotels
and cottages, and within the confines of civilization
only such useless portions of the earth’s surface as
the arid deserts and barren mountain tops, marshy
wastes and rocky or far-distant islets, have been un-
altered by man.
It is especially to the preserving influences of
island life that we owe the continued survival of
many animals which have greatly decreased or be-
come exterminated on the mainland, as has been
remarked of the Terns and Heath Hen—two illus-
128
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 429
trations among hundreds that might be given. Cer-
tain animals, therefore, are not only more abundant
on islands, but, if their home be not shared by man,
they exhibit a tameness surprising to one who has
known only the timid, man-fearing creatures of the
mainland.
On several uninhabited West Indian islets the
sailors of Columbus killed Pigeons and other birds
with sticks, or caught them in their hands. Dar-
win writes of the “extreme tameness” of the birds
of the Galapagos, and tells of pushing a Hawk off
its perch with the muzzle of his gun. Moseley, on
Inaccessible and Kerguelen Islands, had similar ex-
periences.
The Albatrosses of the Laysan Islands show far
less fear of man than do barnyard fowls—in short,
if it were necessary, hundreds of instances might be
cited to show that distrust of man is an acquired
and not a natural trait of animals.
Having these facts in mind, therefore, I be-
thought me of some island or islands which were
neither at the antipodes nor either pole, and where
birds were not only abundant, but in such happy
ignorance of man that no difficulty would be expe-
rienced in securing their photographs. These would
not only have a present interest and value, but would
also form permanent records of conditions already
threatened by the destructive tendencies of the age.
After carefully considering all the more easily
reached islets of the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, my
choice fell on certain of the bird rocks of the Gulf
of St. Lawrence. The name bird rock is used in
both a general and a special sense. In the former it
10
130 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
may be apphed to many of the rocky islets of the
gulf, in the latter it relates exclusively to the Bird
Rocks at the northeastern end of the Magdalen
group.
Percé Rock, Bonaventure Island, the Magdalens,
and the Bird Rocks themselves seemed to offer the
best opportunities to the bird photographer, and,
accompanied by my best assistant, I departed for the
first named on July 2, 1898.
Percé Rock” (so named because its base has been
pierced by the action of the waves) lies about three
hundred feet off the land at the town of Percé, on
the west side of the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
A semiweekly steamer from Dalhousie, near the
head of Bay of Chaleur, furnishes the regular means
of communication with Percé, and the town at once
possesses a distinction over any place on the line of
arailway. For, aside from every other reason, there
is a pervasiveness about the smoke of a railway
locomotive which contaminates the atmosphere and
robs local influences of half their potency. Doubt-
less there are persons who would be glad to change
the aroma of Percé’s fishyards for the stifling air of
a railway tunnel, but give me the pungent odor of
Percé’s drying cod unadulterated.
Even the steamer does not touch Pereé, and we
were landed by a boat in a sea just rough enough to
make the experience interesting. At the pier no
hotel agent greeted us, for Percé possesses neither
hotel nor boarding house, and summer resorters are
almost unknown. This was a delightful discovery.
We had come in search of an isolated colony of
birds, and we found also an isolated colony of man
"YOU OT} TOT, Yor lH “TY
132 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
—quaint fisher folk whose patois French had a
gratefully foreign sound.
Lodgings were secured at the home of a retired
fisherman, and immediately we sallied forth to pay
tribute to the Rock from the nearest point on the
mainland. Its size and precipitousness were both
surprising and impressive. Seen from the land it
seemed like the hull of some great ship which had
gone ashore here in the age of the Titans. Nearly
three hundred feet high at the bow, with a beam of
about one hundred, and a length over all of twelve
hundred feet, it was not likely to be boarded by the
most nimble seaman.
Doubtless an expert climber, properly equipped
with ropes and assistants, might reach the summit ;
but as the last man to make the attempt, some fifty
years ago, lost his life, the town authorities have 1m-
posed a fine of five pounds on any one who shall be
found guilty of scaling or trying to scale the Rock,
and the law, incidentally, protects the birds as well
as man.
The top of the Rock is occupied by a colony of
probably between two and three thousand Herring
Gulls and Double-crested Cormorants. The guide-
books array these birds in picturesque cohorts which
make the Cormorants’ part of the Rock black, the
Gulls’ white; and they further state that should a
black bird chance to trespass on the Gulls’ territory,
he is immediately surrounded by a consuming white
cloud, and vice versa, But be it said to the disgrace
of man and the credit of birds, that the Cormorants
and Gulls nest side by side apparently on terms of
the greatest amity.
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 133
At this point it should be stated that my photo-
graphic outfit consisted of an ancient but useful
4x5 “Waterbury Detective,” containing a wide
angle, short-focus lens, and designed for general
handwork; a 4 x 5 long-focus “ Premo” with a 63-
inch trade lens and Unicum shutter, for use from a
tripod or in photographing nests, landscapes, etc.,
and a 5 X 7 twin lens with a 10-inch lens and Prosch
shutter, a camera made especially for animal pho-
tography, but which was undesirably bulky.
None of these was of service in photographing
the inhabitants of Percé Rock from the land, nor
could a telephoto be used to advantage, the Rock
being so much higher than the adjoining mainland.
From a boat near the base of the southeast side of
the Rock a better opportunity is afforded for pho-
tographing its summit, and the best of several at-
tempts made at this point is here presented.” Ex-
amined under a glass it conveys some idea of the
number of birds occupying the top of the Rock; and
while one regrets that the camera does so little jus-
tice to the subject, one can not but rejoice that here,
at least, is one place to which probably for all time
birds may return each year and rear their young in
perfect security.
In crevices in the face of the Rock numbers of
Guillemots nest, and directly above the pierced
opening dwell a colony of about thirty Kittiwakes,
who have apparently taken up their residence in the
Rock within comparatively recent years, since none
were here in 1881 when Mr. William Brewster vis-
ited Percé.
Wherever one be about Percé, in the town or
“Yoo oT] JO yttutans ay} Wo UVas ATUIIP oq AVUT ST[NY) PUB s]JUBIONLIOD IY J, “pls ysvayNos Woy Yooy goleaq “GL
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 135
out, the Rock is the prominent feature of the coast
line. It dominates its surroundings as a snow-
capped mountain rules its dependent ranges. To
the bird lover it possesses a double fascination, and
one is constantly attracted by the ceaseless cries
of the throng of hovering birds, who in some inde-
scribable way seem to invest their home with a sense
of the charm, the freedom, the wildness of a sea-
bird’s hfe. Itisa true bird rock; man has no part
in it.
At sunset this bond between the Rock and its
inhabitants seemed especially strong and_ real.
Through a notch in the western hills the last rays
of the sun fell squarely upon the Rock, illuminating
it and the ever-present soaring Gulls after the land
and the sea were in shadow. Slowly the light left
the Rock, until it, too, was of the same gray-blue as
its surroundings ; then, like the beams from a search-
light, it struck the circling mass of Gulls, making
them seem a flurry of snowflakes descending into
the gloom below.
The pilgrim to Percé Rock will find that the
object of his journey not only exceeds in grandeur
his brightest imagination of it, but he will be fur-
ther rewarded by discovering Percé itself and the
country round about to be of exceptional interest
and beauty. It was the season of codfishing, and
every morning a fleet of a hundred or more stanch
little boats, each with two men, put out into the bay
for a day’s fishing. Their return, late in the after-
noon, was an eventful part of the day. Then the
beach was the center of attraction as boat after boat
came in, the men depositing their catch on the sands,
136 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
then setting up their tables and “ splitting ” the cod
with surprising dexterity.”
This industry resulted in a singular habit among
the Herring Gulls, which, when first seen, I was at a
73. Splitting cod on Perce beach. Pereé Rock in the distance.
loss to explain. In a cultivated hillside bordering
the town a flock of about fifty Gulls was observed
eagerly devouring some food, which was apparently
abundant. “ Grasshoppers,” I thought, but on in-
vestigation the grasshoppers proved to be entrails,
heads, vertebree, ete., of codfish, which had been
strewn over the fields as fertilizer. The Gulls took
wing at my approach, and perched in long rows on
the fences; a curious sight, of which I tried, but
failed, to secure a picture.
It was through these fields, and along the crests
of the red sandstone cliffs northwest of the town,
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 137
that my walks oftenest led me. A few Herring
Gulls nested on the ledges, and Mr. Kearton might
have succeeded in securing the photographs of them.
But I freely confess to an absence of both taste and
talent as a cliffman, and was quite content, under
the circumstances, to view the
birds from above. They, how-
ever, had no scruples about
approaching me, and uttering
a threatening ka-ka-ka, which
suggested the voice of a gigan-
tic katydid, circled about my
head or, with an alarming
swish, swooped down so near
me that I invariably was sur-
prised into “ducking.” Here
also were croaking Ravens, who
seemed by no means shy, and
on nearly every fence post was
a Savanna Sparrow, by all odds
the most abundant land bird
observed.
Turning from the cliffs, one
soon reached the spreue and
balsam forests, with their twit-
tering Juncos, sweet - voiced
White-throated Sparrows, Pine
Finches, and numerous Warb-
lers, and following the gently
74. Young Savanna Sparrow.
ascending lanes and pathways leading through the
fragrant woods, arrived at the shrine-crowned sum-
mit of Mount St. Anne, twelve hundred feet above
the gulf.
138 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
It is a superb view of boundless sea and forest
which greets one from this vantage point—a strik-
ing combination of the charms of land and water,
To the south, the Bay Chaleur with its broken coast
line; to the west, a grand panorama of mountain
and valley, all densely wooded—the home of bear,
and deer, and caribou; to the north, a foreground
of red cliffs and blue water, and, in the distance,
Gaspé; to the east, the apparently limitless gulf and,
seemingly beneath one, Bonaventure Island, Percé,
and the Rock.
It was a view to remember; one, I trust, I may
be privileged to behold again. I longed for time to
explore the surrounding woods, but Bonaventure
with its Gannets wielded a stronger fascination, and
two days after our arrival we chartered a cod boat,
with its crew, for the voyage to the Gannet rooker-
ies on the eastern side of Bonaventure, distant about
four miles,
The evident great strength of our craft in pro-
portion to its size made it seem like a stunted vessel,
and her captain and the crew, of one man, seemed
built on the same lines. During the winter they
were lumbermen in the region north of Ottawa, in
the summer codfishers. It is doubtful if they could
have selected occupations requiring greater endur-
ance. They seemed as tough as rawhide, and as
rough as pirates.
My good assistant they invariably spoke of as
“the woman,” but both proved true men at heart,
and as solicitous for our welfare as though their own
lives of exposure had not trained them to laugh at
hardship.
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 139
I may seem to give undue attention to the boat-
men of a day; but there are days and days in our
lives, and with neither my companion nor myself
will time dim the memory of the day off Bona-
venture.
There had been a heavy blow from the east the
night before, the tide was ebbing, and ere we had
passed the Rock, and while still under the lee of
Bonaventure, our boat began to toss in a very dis-
quieting manner. As we rounded the southwest end
of Bonaventure we were more exposed to the action
of the waves, but my physical balance was sustained
by the anticipation of seeing “two, tree million of
bird,” which the men declared would soon be visible
on the cliffs.
The farther we advanced the less shelter had we
from the land, and finally, passing the northwest
end of the island, we were at the mercy of the full
force of a long rolling sea, which made it impossible
to stand, or even sit, without clinging to one’s sur-
roundings. At this point, I believe, the promise of
the most wonderful sight in the bird world would not
have induced me to continue on our course another
minute; but fortunately no promise was required,
the sight itself existed, and under its inspiration I
battled with weak nature for the next half hour
with a courage born of enthusiasm and a desire to
picture the wonders of the scene before me.
On the ledges of the red sandstone cliffs, which
rose sheer three hundred feet above the waves at
their base, was row after row of snow-white Gan-
nets on their nests.” Their number was incredible,
and as we coasted slowly onward, the red walls above
‘QINJUIALTOT Jo spp yauuvy oy, “cL
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 141
us were streaked with white as far as one could see
in either direction, and the hoarse cries of the birds
rose in chorus above the sound of the beating waves.
It was a wild picture, which the majesty of the cliffs
and the grandeur of the sea rendered exceedingly
impressive.
How I longed for the internal composure of my
boatmen! One moment I bowed to the waves, the
next propped myself against the mast and, held by
the captain, attempted to use the twin-lens camera.
Water, cliff, and sky danced across the ground glass
in bewildering succession, as, like a wing-shot, I
squeezed my pneumatic bulb and snapped at the
jumping sky line.
One or two exposures were followed by collapse,
and in time by partial recuperation, which permitted
fresh efforts. In the picture presented the cliff is
well shown, but the birds are not so numerous as in
others less successful photographically. And dur-
ing this time how fared my assistant ? Charity for-
bids a reply. I will only say that, in response to a
hail from a passing fisherman, our captain shouted,
* Son malade !”
The supply of 5x 7 plates exhausted, we came
about, and sailing before the wind quickly reached
the leeward side of the island, where, under the re-
viving influence of calmer water, we determined to
revisit the Gannets, this time, however, by land.
Disembarking at the fishing village, which is
situated on the west side of Bonaventure, we were
soon in the spruce and balsam forests, which occupy
all but the borders of the island, here about a mile
and a half in width. The change from the turmoil
142 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
and vastness of the sea to the quiet and seclusion
of the forest made the previous hour’s experience
seem distant and unreal. The wind which had
roared through our rigging now breathed peacefully
through the tree tops; the heaving, frothy sea was
replaced by stable earth, wondrously carpeted with
snow-white cornel and dainty twin-flowers ;” instead
of the harsh cries of the Gannets, we heard the Ave
Maria of the White-throated Sparrow. Rarely have
46. Cornel or bunehberry.
the woods seemed so beautiful. Approaching the
eastern cliffs, the trees became dwarfed and singu-
larly malformed by the winds. Finally they disap-
peared altogether, and were succeeded by fields blue
with iris. Never have T seen this plant so abundant.
There were acres of flowers reaching to the very
edge of the cliffs, where, with only a change in the
tint, the blue of the iris faded into the blue of
the sea,
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE {43
We were now nearing the Gannets; desiring to
secure a picture of a fully occupied ledge, I urged
due caution, and advanced quietly to the edge of
the cliff. The point was well chosen—almost di-
rectly beneath us, and about halfway down to the
sea, there being a broad, rocky shelf so thickly
dotted with nesting Gannets that every bird in the
group was within reach of his immediately sur-
rounding fellows.” It was an astonishing picture
of bird life, but only a fragment of what we had
beheld from the sea. Under the circumstances,
however, this fragment brought more satisfaction
than had been before received from the entire Gan-
net colony.
The 4x5 “ Premo” was now erected, care being
taken to make no move which would alarm the
birds, and several exposures were made at leisure.
Then changing the lens to an old “ Henry Clay,”
and attaching several elastics to the shutter, I pre-
pared to make a flight picture of the birds as, at the
report of my gun, they left their nests. All ready,
I took firm hold of the bulb and gave the word to
the captain to fire.
The result may fairly be called a failure. As far
as we could determine, the birds gave no evidence
of hearing the shot or the others which followed, and
our best efforts did not succeed in making a single
Gannet leave its nest. Like Darwin’s Hawk and
Moseley’s Penguins, these birds seemed happily
ignorant of man and his ways. One could doubt-
less descend to their ledge without causing them to
leave it.
It is conceivable that the wearing of Gannets’
radnqord SIq} Ul UAMOTS Olu spaq patpunty MOF OG y *syouuery Sutysatt jo aspal We “Lh
PERCE AND BONAVENTURE 145
heads, or feet, or wings may some day become fash-
ionable, but unless the demand be urgent and the
price sufficient to tempt men to risk their lives, the
Gannets will long continue to nest on the cliffs of
Bonaventure.
11
THE MAGDALENS
|ROM Percé to the Magdalens by sea
is about a hundred and twenty
miles, but lacking a proper vessel
we were forced to return to Dal-
housie and there take the Inter-
national Railroad to Pictou, where
a weekly steamer leaves for Prince
Edward Island and the “ Madalenes,” as the natives
call them.
The journey is possessed of both present and
historic interest, and the hospitality for which the
residents of Pictou are noted assures one of a pleas-
ant stay in their picturesque little town. Here I
met a veteran ornithologist—James McKinlay—who,
although over threescore and ten and isolated from
others of kindred tastes, still possesses the enthusiasm
of the genuine naturalist. His collection, the greater
part of which he has presented to the Pictou Acad-
emy, contains, among other birds, a Brown Pelican,
a Corncrake, and a Chuck-will’s-widow—all shot in
the vicinity.
The Magdalen steamer is neither a yacht nor an
ocean greyhound, but answers very well for the
short voyage of a hundred and fifty miles across
the gulf. Pictou was left at noon, and the following
morning we awakened to find the steamer at anchor
146
THE MAGDALENS 147
off an island with red sandstone cliffs, and green
fields rising gently into hills clad with stunted
spruce forests. This was at the southern end of the
long sand bar which joins these so-called islands; and
our destination, Grand Entry, near the northern end
of the chain, was reached late in the afternoon.
At this point we embarked in a small sailboat,
and in a driving rainstorm flew before the wind
across a bay two miles in width, and up an arm a
mile or so in length, to the settlement of Grosse Isle,
on the island of the same name. The tide was out;
Black-backed Gulls were feeding on the flats, and
Gannets fishing in the deeper water ; Guillemots rose
before the boat; a seal showed itself for a moment
and disappeared—moving figures in a picture which
impressed itself very vividly on my memory. A
landing was made with difficulty, and a walk of
nearly a mile through the scrubby spruces brought
us to the home of the fisher folk, who had agreed to
take us in.
If Percé is isolated, Grosse Isle is in another
sphere. Even the weekly steamer which plies be-
tween Pictou and the Magdalens from May to No-
vember comes no nearer than Grand Entry, and its
arrival seemed a rather vague incident, made real
only by the appearance of mail.
The lobster season had just closed, the “pots”
were piled in heaps on the beaches, and mackerel
fishing was now the presumable industry of the male
population of Grosse Isle. But few fish were run-
ning, and each day boat after boat of glum-looking
men came in from the sea with often only a few cod
to show for their labor. This, however, was midsum-
148 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
mer, and the Grosse Isle “ season” was in full swing.
There was a school picnic one day ; on another, serv-
ice was held in the little white church on the hill-
side; but, as I considered the deathlike quiet which,
as a rule, reigned in the village, I wondered what
life must be there in winter. Then the entire Mag-
dalen group is frozen in a sea of ice, which renders
communication with the mainland (except by cable,
generally out of
repair) impossi-
ble. When the
ice breaks in the
spring, seals ap-
pear and furnish
a hazardous occu-
pation to those
who are venture-
some enough to
go in pursuit of
them—a form of
sport which I im-
agine is eagerly
welcomed — after
the lethargy of
winter. With us
the Magdalens
were only a step-
ping - stone — to
Bird Rock, but
while preparing for the continuation of our jour-
Ts. Nest and eges of Lox Sparrow.
ney to that point we took some note of our sur-
roundings.
The Magdalens have an interesting avifauna, but
THE MAGDALENS 149
it was now the latter half of July and the song sea-
son of most species was over. Fox Sparrows, how-
ever, were still singing, and their clear, ringing
whistle came from the spruces all about. The fogs,
so characteristic of the region, seemed in no way to
dampen their spirits, and when the gray mists closed
in thick about us their notes rang out as cheerily as
though the sun shone from a blue sky.
My short excursions, however, were largely made
along the beaches in search of some sea waif, and
for the shore birds that would soon migrate through
these islands in large numbers, or to the cliffs where
the Guillemots were nesting. The latter were com-
parative strangers to me, and I had not become
accustomed to the plump, black, white-winged, little
birds that sat so lightly on the water. They nest in
scattered pairs, in crevices, in the face of the cliffs,
where my guide, Mr. Shelbourne, a resident col-
lector, was particularly apt at discovering them.
Grosse Isle is not beyond the range of the nest-
robbing small boy, and only the few Guillemots that
had contrived to escape him now had young. They
were feeding them on sand eels, and with bills full
of their shining prey made frequent visits to their
nests. The young varied in development from those
as yet covered only with the scanty natal down to
others half grown and with the black and white
second plumage appearing beneath. They were ac-
tive enough to test the temper of the most patient
bird photographer, and the accompanying picture
was secured only after many trials.”
In the meantime we were endeavoring to make
some arrangements for our voyage to the Rock,
150 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
which on clear days could be seen from the tops of
the higher hills—a hazy dot in the sea. Imagination
peopled the view with Cartier, Audubon, and his
successors, and I could scarcely believe that the
scene of the wonders they had described was actu-
ew -
49, Young Guillemots,
ally on my horizon. But, although only twenty
miles away, Bird Rock now seemed more distant
than before we had taken the first step of our jour-
ney. This ina measure is due to the uncertainty of
gulf weather, the strong tides, the sudden and severe
THE MAGDALENS 151
squalls, the prevalence of fogs, and the surprising
rapidity with which the latter change a sunlit hori-
zon to closely crowding gray walls—all of which
make navigation in these waters more than usually
dangerous. Furthermore, it is to be remembered
that Bird Rock is not a port in which one could seek
safety from a storm, but a spot to be approached
only in the calmest weather. One might therefore
start for the Rock under the most favorable condi-
tions, be caught in a squall and, as a result, find one’s
self at sea with the recently desired haven changed
to an element of danger.
With the Rock glimmering in the sunlight and
apparently almost within reach, it was not easy to
believe tales of disaster which had befallen those
who in small boats had attempted to reach it, and I
was more impressed with its inaccessibility by the
fact that only one of the many fishermen with whom
I talked, had ever landed on this inhospitable resort
of sea birds.
This man proved a friend in need—one Captain
Hubbard Taker, of the thirty-ton schooner Sea Gem.
I commend him to every visitor to the Magdalens
as aman and a sailor. It was when the difficulties
of reaching the Rock by small boat appeared insur-
mountable that Captain Taker returned from a fish-
ing trip to the Labrador coast. He proved to be
one of those rare but exceedingly satisfactory indi-
viduals with whom anything is possible, or at least
who believes it is until the contrary is shown. Could
he take us to Bird Rock? “Why, of course; and
whenever you are ready.” So without delay we
boarded the Sea Gem.
BIRD ROCK
Tee oe a
Pr Le ‘F as a result of a conference be-
‘ ( tween the birds and the Audubon
Society a home were to be selected
rola 8 which should prove a secure re-
i hoe §% 4
treat for certain of the feathered
Se kind, I imagine that Bird Rock,
wee , in its primal condition, would
have afnieiely filled the requirements set forth by
both conferees.
With precipitous, rocky walls weathered into
innumerable ledges, shelves, and crevices—all fit
nesting sites—one might think of it as a colossal
lodging house for the countless sea-bird tenants who
find here not only a suitable place for the reproduc-
tion of their young, but in the surrounding waters
an abundant and unfailing supply of food. Add
to these conditions the Rock’s isolation and inac-
cessibility, its shoreless outline, and the difficulty
with which it may be ascended, and we have indeed
an ideal refuge for sea fowl, one in which, unless
they were subjected to special persecution, they
might have continued to exist for centuries, had not
the transforming influences of civilization reached
even to this isle of the sea.
Bird Rock is about fifty miles northwest of Cape
Breton, the nearest mainland, and twelve east of
152
BIRD ROCK 153
Bryon Island, its next neighbor in the Magdalen
group, to which it belongs. It is three hundred and
fifty yards long, from fifty to one hundred and forty
yards wide, and rises abruptly from the sea to a
height of from eighty to one hundred and forty feet.
Its outline, the nature of its base, sides, and summit
are well indicated by the accompanying pictures.
80. Bird Rock trom the southwest; distant about one half a mile.
Three quarters of a mile northeast of Bird Rock,
or Great Bird, as it is more specifically called, lies
Little Bird, a red sandstone rock which at high tide,
or from a distance, appears as two. The shallow
water between Great and Little Birds suggests the
154 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
possibility of a past connection and the probability
that in some future geological age the waves will
have completed their work of destruction, when both
islands will have disappeared.
The history of these bird-inhabited islands is
interesting, and gives us some information of the
changes which man has wrought in their bird life.
It begins with the account given by Jacques Cartier
of his voyage to Canada in 1434. Of the Bird Rocks
he wrote: “ We came to three islands, two of which
are as steep and upright as any wall, so that it was
not possible to climb them, and between them is a lit-
tle rock. These islands were as full of birds as any
meadow is of grass, which there do make their nests,
and in the greatest of them there was a great and
infinite number of those that we called Margaulx,
that are white and bigger than any geese, which
were severed in one part. In the other were only
Godetz, but toward the shore there were of those
Godetz and great Apponatz, like to those of that
island that we above have mentioned. We went
down to the lowest part of the least island, where
we killed above a thousand of those Godetz and
Apponatz. We put into our boats as many as we
pleased, for in less than one hour we might have
filled thirty such boats of them. We named them
the islands of the Margaulx.”
Concerning this quotation Mr. F. A. Lucas re-
marks (The Auk, v, 1888, page 129): “ While this
description, as well as the sentences which imme-
diately precede it, contains some statements that
apparently are at variance with existing facts, there
is nevertheless good reason to believe that Cartier
BIRD ROCK 155
here refers to the Bird Rocks in the Gulf of St. Law-
rence. The birds called Margaulx, which bite even
as dogs, were Gannets, whose descendants, in spite
of centuries of persecution, are to be found to-day
nesting where their ancestors did before them.
“That Cartier’s description does not accord with
their present appearance is not to be wondered at.
The material of which they are composed is of a
soft, decomposing, red sandstone that succumbs so
easily to the incessant attacks of the sea that Dr.
Bryant's description of them in 1860 does not hold
good to-day. If, then, the Bird Rocks have under-
gone visible changes in twenty-five years, it is easy
to imagine how great alterations the islets may have
undergone during three and a quarter centuries.”
Examination of the narratives left by other early
voyagers in this region would yield further infor-
mation concerning the Rocks and the destruction
of its inhabitants; but passing to records of greater
ornithological value, we find that Audubon, whose
energy in exploration no ornithologist has ever sur-
passed, was the first naturalist beholding Bird Rock
to leave us a description of its wonders. It was
during his cruise to Labrador in the schooner Rip-
ley that he wrote in his journal, under date of June
14, 1833, the following graphic account of the day’s
experiences :
“ About ten a speck rose on the horizon, which
I was told was the Rock. We sailed well, the breeze
increased fast, and we neared this object apace. At
eleven I could distinguish its top plainly from the
deck, and thought it covered with snow to the depth
of several feet; this appearance existed on every
s}. North side of the Rock, west of the erane.
BIRD ROCK 157
portion of the flat, projecting shelves. Godwin
said, with the coolness of a man who had visited this
Rock for ten successive seasons, that what we saw
was not snow, but Gannets. I rubbed my eyes, took
my spyglass, and in an instant the strangest picture
stood before me. They were birds we saw—a mass
of birds of such a size as I never before cast my
eyes on. The whole of my party stood astounded
and amazed, and all came to the conclusion that
such a sight was of itself sufficient to invite any one
to come across the gulf to view it at this season.
The nearer we approached the greater our surprise
at the enormous number of these birds, all calmly
seated on their eggs or newly hatched brood, their
heads all turned to windward and toward us. The
air above for a hundred yards, and for some dis-
tance around the whole Rock, was filled with Gan-
nets on the wing, which, from our position, made it
appear as if a heavy fall of snow was directly above
us.” (Audubon and his Journals, 1, p. 360.)
From his pilot, Godwin, Audubon secured some
information concerning the Gannets that then
nested on the top of the Rock. He writes: “The
whole surface is perfectly covered with nests, placed
about two feet apart, in such regular order that you
may look through the lines as you would look
through those of a planted patch of sweet potatoes
or cabbages. The fishermen who kill these birds to
get their flesh for codfish bait ascend in parties of
six or eight, armed with clubs; sometimes, indeed,
the party comprises the crews of several vessels.
As they reach the top, the birds, alarmed, rise
with a noise like thunder, and fly off in such a
158 BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA
hurried, fearful confusion as to throw each other
down, often falling on each other until there is a
bank of them many feet high. The men strike
them down and kill them until fatigued or satisfied.
Five hundred and forty have been thus murdered
in one hour by six men. The birds are skinned
with little care, and the flesh cut off in chunks; it
will keep fresh about a fortnight. So great is the
destruction of these birds annually that their flesh
supphes the bait for upward of forty fishing boats
which lie close to Bryon Island, each summer.”
This slaughter was evidently attended by some
danger, for not only did the sitting birds bite vi-
ciously, but old fishermen in the Magdalens state
that if the invader of the Gannets’ domain on the
summit of the Rock should have happened to be
‘caught in a rush of stampeded birds, he could with
difficulty have avoided being carried off the edge of
the cliff.
In concluding his description of the Rock, Audu-
bon says: “No man who has not seen what we have
this day can form the least idea of the impression
the sight made on our minds.” One need not be a
naturalist, therefore, to realize the depth of his dis-
appointment when the pilot told him that the wind
was too high to permit them to land on the Rock.
However, they did not leave without at least mak-
ing an attempt.