I meet the gathered team of five expert bird banders---Dr. Zinn in the middle, three graduate students including my daughter Hannah, and a gentleman volunteer who is a retired biologist from Cornell ornithology laboratories. I notice they are all wearing waterproof boots. Already my wet cold feet tell me why. Promptly at 6:30 the team members clip a few small drawstring bags to their belts, get their net assignments and head out. The bags, made of white cloth, are for carrying the birds, once extracted from the nets, back to the banding table. They prevent trauma, injury, and escape.
I follow Hannah to our assigned nets. My shoes and socks soak up the morning dew as we slog through the long prairie grass. Of our three nets, two are empty, and one holds two small brown birds struggling to get free---a song sparrow and a female indigo bunting. An indigo bunting! Hannah gently cups the first thrashing sparrow in her hand, holding its neck between two fingers so the head is on the outside of her hand, the body in her palm. She carefully lifts each thread of the net from the body, but the feet are so hopelessly entwined as to necessitate calling Dr. Zinn for assistance. The second, the bunting, Hannah extracts easily and drops into a bag. Dr. Zinn arrives from somewhere in the dawn to skillfully rescue the sparrow. We carry them back to the banding table. I imagine myself to be a small sparrow, stunned by whatever I have flown into, frightened by the monster hands, mystified by the whiteness from which I cannot escape, unable to understand that this is a temporary discomfort or that I am making a contribution to scientific research. I might be fighting for my life, but I'm not sure, because so far I'm not hurt and no one is eating me. Who knows? I only know I don't like it.
I, as an amateur observer of the work, am thoroughly energized by the experience---the wonder of the natural world, the thrill of new knowledge gained, the marvel at the organizational efficiency of the bird banding process, the care and respect the researchers exhibit for each tiny specimen they study. More on that part of it tomorrow. dkm
6 comments:
Thanks for writing this blog. It is great to hear what a new person sees and experiences on their first bird banding expedition. Maybe I should have new students read your blog to get some idea of what to expect. I am glad it worked out for you to participate!
Lisa
That last comment was from me, by the way. I somehow was using an old account when I posted.
Lisa
You'd be amazed to know what little I understood about a bird banding---and how curious I was to know more. You are a great teacher. I know why your students all speak so highly of you. I'd be honored to have anyone read the blog. And please let me know if I need to correct any of the info. As it was all so new to me, I'm sure I missed much.
Thank you again for including me. It was intensely interesting for an amateur birder---an experience I will always remember.
Deb you lucky duck! Thanks for your faithful posting/sharing .
Amen---it was a fabulous experience---still processing---slow to get it in blog---
speaking of which, I'm ready for a new recipe on yours! I check for one every now and then---hope all is well---
Rick was wonderful at both Steve and Ruth's memorial services.
We miss you guys!
Wow--what a great post. Your love and enthusiasm for the subject matter is infectious and makes me curious and excited about something I don't normally think about! I especially loved it when you went inside the small sparrow's mind--I felt like I was right there. Thanks for posting--looking forward to more!
Post a Comment