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Year: 2007

Chipping Sparrows

I see these little guys all the time, crowding around the spilled seed beneath the feeder. I have a tendency to name any small brown bird a sparrow so I was pleasantly surprised to learn that these guys really are sparrows, chipping sparrows to be precise.

According to my bird book, chipping sparrows are nicknamed “hairbirds” because they use hair in their nests that they steal from unsuspecting horses and sometimes napping dogs. Perhaps – gasp! – even lazy greyhounds.

Apparently, they are also one of the signs of spring in northern climes where they replace the American tree sparrows that move up to the Arctic to breed.

Frightful’s Mountain

The Central Flyway goes right through Texas making it great place for birding. Around this time of year you can see all kinds of eagles, hawks and falcons migrating through. Each year when I see these magnificent creatures, I can’t help but wonder how far they’ve traveled, what those avian eyes have seen.

Last year, we cruised up Canyon of the Eagles, but it’s a good time for reading about birds too, which brings me to Frightful’s Mountain. Well, not literally except in how we travel when we read.

A year ago, I read My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George when I found myself unexpectedly teaching it. I enjoyed the book so much, I decided to include it in my middle school class this year. As I suspected they enjoyed it, but a few were asking about sequels. I did a bit of research and found two: On the Far Side of the Mountain and Frightful’s Mountain.

I bought both for my classroom and skimmed over Far Side of the Mountain, which is mostly a continuation of Sam’s adventures living off the land in the Catskill Mountains. It ends with him being forced to release the peregrine falcon he captured and raised in the first book. Frightful’s Mountain is the story – from Frightful’s point of view – of her first two years in the wild. I meant to skim this one two, but I fell into and couldn’t put it down.

After spending the first two years of her life in captivity, Frightful is now free and has no idea how to survive in the wild. She longs to return to “the one mountain among thousands, the one tree among millions, and the boy named Sam,” but slowly instinct takes over, but that alone can’t prepare her for the dangers faced by wild birds: poachers, predators, electrical wires, habitat loss, pollution, and DDT, which still affects birds that migrate to South America.

For people who love birds, this is a gripping book. George’s depiction of Frightful’s attempts to follow the other birds south with each wave of migration is heartbreaking. She knows she must go, but she keeps returning to Sam’s tree until it’s too late to migrate. She barely survives a tough winter and when the next year rolled around I found myself at the edge of my seat wondering if she would be able to give up her training and follow her instincts. “Go south, Frightful, go south and live on a beach,” I found myself wanting to yell at her.

Frightful’s Mountain is a wonderful companion piece to My Side of the Mountain. They both tell the tale of leaving behind what you know in order to survive in a tough world, where nature can be as inspiring as it is merciless, and for Frightful, not nearly as dangerous as man. It’s rare that a sequel, written years after the original, surpasses its source material, but this is one instance where it does.

Frightful’s story is beautifully told and is an important reminder to young readers of the beauty and wonder of nature. It’s also a treat to read such a book at a time of year when you can just go outside and see birds of prey everywhere and understand immediately the author’s passion for her subject.

If you want to see a real peregrine falcon, visit Hasty Brook where Lynne caught sight of one hanging out on a downtown building in Minnesota. Birdchick also has a few pictures of the same bird.

Blue Jay

Blue Jays are one of my favorite backyard birds. Whenever they come around, I find myself stopping to watch and see what they do.

This one had things to say. He hopped around in the tree and then down to the fence, chirping and squawking at me. I know they can be fairly aggressive birds, and since this is a family blog, I won’t repeat exactly what he was squawking.

Perhaps he felt the feeder needed a refill.

Either way, it’s nice to have colorful birds come by from time to time.

Monday Movie Roundup

It hadn’t happened since July, but we went to a theater…

Zodiac (David Fincher, 2007)

Zodiac tells the tale of the investigation into the identity of the Zodiac Killer who killed at least five people in northern California between 1968 and 1969. The killer wrote letters taunting police and reporters until 1974. His identity has never been confirmed.

The movie focuses on the investigators assigned the task of catching him and the reporters and staff at the newspapers to which he sent his coded letters. Ultimately, the film documents the toll the investigation takes on the people attempting to find Zodiac, particulary Robert Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal), The San Franscisco Chronicle’s editorial cartoonist who becomes obsessed with discovering Zodiac’s identity.

Ultimately, Graysmith’s research led to the 1986 book, which is the source material for the film. My wife has been bugging me to read the book for years. It’s been updated to include Graysmith’s theoy about the killer’s identity, a man who died in 1992 without ever being charged. We ordered a copy.

Whatever the killer’s real identity, this is a captivating film about obsession, and in this case, it’s not the killer who is obsessed.

Backyard Wildlife

I spent the early part of the week working in the yard trying to create something of a bird world. I love watching birds, and lately I’ve been wanting to increase the variety that come around as well as learn who they are.

We’ve had a bird feeder up for the past two years. I fill it up. Mr. Squirrel comes along and empties it onto the ground, and then he and the white-winged doves eat most of the seeds; therefore, the first step was to give Mr Squirrel his own feeder.

He seems to like it.

In addition to the (still vacant) owl house I hung, I put up a wren house. Two Carolina wrens moved in and built a nest of sticks and feathers, and as of yesterday, there were two eggs in the nest.

I also hung up a suet feeder to try to get woodpeckers and finches, and a bluebird nest box (that will probably house more wrens since I’ve never seen a bluebird around here) went up as well.

Here’s the birds I know I’ve seen so far in the past few weeks.

I love springtime.

Back with a Friday Random Ten

And now I’m back with a post-operative Friday Random Ten and something for me to remember: Cimbing trees + Excessive workouts + Furniture moving = hernia repair surgery.

It’s been jazz and painkillers since Wednesday. I’m getting off the codeine, but jazz is a lasting addiction…

  1. “Betcha By Golly Wow” – Grant Green – Live at the Lighthouse
  2. “One Note Samba” – Charlie Byrd Trio with Ken Peplowski – The Bossa Nova Years
  3. “Rain, Rain Go Away” – Vince Guaraldi – Oh, Good Grief!
  4. “Walkin'” – Miles Davis – Miles in Tokyo (Live)
  5. “Fifty Years” – Bill Frisell – Blues Dream
  6. “You Are the World” – Donald Byrd – Stepping Into Tomorrow
  7. “Passionelle” – Acoustic Alchemy – Positive Thinking
  8. “Sanctuary” – Mahavishnu Orchestra – Birds of Fire
  9. “The Thumb” – Wes Montgomery – Tequila
  10. “Years of Yearning” – EST – Strange Place for Snow

Spring Break, New Neighbors & Friday’s Random Ten on Saturday

Los Borrachos 
“Los Borrachos” by Diego Velázquez via Wikipedia

Spring break has sprung. The weather is beautiful, mild Austin March. With SXSW, the Rodeo, high school basketball tournaments, the legislature, spring break and all the other Austin March Madness, it’s a great week for staying home.

To that end, I did some yardwork: the first mow, the last raking, some weeding. Suddenly, our yard is kind of nice again.

A couple of Carolina wrens finally moved into the wren house I hung a few weeks ago. So far, no one had moved into the wolery, but I probably hung it too late.

There are lots of blue jays around all of a sudden and a female cardinal comes to the dinner bell to share mealworms with Mr and Mrs Wren. The squirrels are back too. Joey is hoping that squirrel stew will be on the menu one of these days.

And, finally, Friday’s random ten, which I didn’t have time to post yesterday, and I know how the world hangs on what plays on my ipod each Friday…

  1. “Refusal” – Ennio Morricone – The Mission
  2. “Samba De Orfeu” – Ray Anthony – Ultra-Lounge, Volume 14: Bossanovaville
  3. “(When You Wake) You’re Still in a Dream” – My Bloody Valentine – Isn’t Anything
  4. “Feelin’ Good” – John Coltrane – The John Coltrane Quartet Plays
  5. “Silent in the Morning” – Phish – Rift
  6. “Towards Omega” – Astral Matrix – Global Underground 006: John Digweed, Sydney
  7. “Afrique” – Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers – The Witch Doctor
  8. “Crackity Jones” – Pixies – Doolittle
  9. “Sick of You” – Lou Reed – New York
  10. “Theoretical Chaos” – Sonic Youth – Dirty (Deluxe Edition)

This Thing of Darkness

I realize it’s been nearly a year since I posted one of my old short stories. Strangely, “This Thing of Darkness” is one of the first I ever posted, back during an older incarnation of this site. It was originally published on a now-defunct online literary journal called TheSoundOfWhat?

I wrote it in 1997 when I was living in south Austin, and it’s a south Austin kind of tale about bad neighbors, roommates and a giant mushroom.

Like many stories, “This Thing of Darkness” contains elements that are based on my own experiences. In this case, the more fantastic elements are the ones I didn’t make up. Everything about the fungus is true.

You can find “This Thing of Darkness”on the Sories & Poems page or link directly from here.