Discover Concord magazine Fall 2020

Page 18

Snow Geese passing over

Fly

Time to

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STORY AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY DAVE WITHERBEE

Do you think about going south for the winter? So do many birds. As the days get shorter and cooler, many of Concord’s resident birds get restless and think about wintering elsewhere. These birds migrate primarily because of food and not to avoid our cold winters. Many of the birds that migrate depend mostly on berries, seeds, and insects for their daily meals, but the insects crawl into the ground, dig under leaves, or drill under tree bark and sleep through the cold winter months. The migratory birds are not as well equipped as a woodpecker to hammer a hole in a tree to gather sleeping insects. Woodpeckers account for about 30% of birds that stay. Other noticeable birds that stay are chickadees, cardinals, titmice, nuthatches, wrens, and the family of corvids: blue jays, crows, and ravens. The corvids will eat about anything, including carcasses. The birds that stay tend to form groups to help each other find food and warmth, which is why we see more of them together in winter. Birds that eat fish and frogs, like the great blue herons, have a problem dining when layers of ice shield the fish and frogs snuggle in the mud. The great blue herons are late to leave Concord but when 16

Discover CONCORD

| Fall 2020

the rivers and lakes ice up, they move a relatively short distance toward the ocean because it stays open and mostly free of ice. Migration is a risky undertaking. Many of our birds do not make it to their destination, so they have to plan well to limit the risks. Birds that can soar, such as hawks, use the daytime thermals to carry them aloft. (If you go to the top of Mt. Wachusetts in October on a sunny day you will likely see many hawks getting lift from the air currents and soaring south.) There are also non-soaring birds that use the daytime thermals, such as swallows. These birds also tend to fly in the morning and then take Osprey heading south

Heron ice fishing

a rest. It’s like people driving to Florida and stopping at motels along the way. Geese and some other birds have found it very helpful to fly in a V formation to take advantage of a leader who breaks up the air currents. The leaders have to work harder so the geese take turns. Many of the smaller birds like warblers are not helped by thermals so they travel at night when the cooler air temperatures and smoother air are better for their energetic flights. All of these migrating birds need a lot of fat for energy, but those that travel long distances, such as one or two thousand miles, need a large percentage of their weight as fat to sustain themselves. And that brings me to perhaps the most outstanding flyer of all birds, our ruby throated hummingbirds (the only hummingbirds in Concord), who fly over the Gulf of Mexico to South America at night. It helps that these tiny birds, usually weighing around three ounces, can store up to two ounces of fat to fuel their journey. And they can not only hover to gather nectar and insects, but also fly backwards. All that is hard to beat. ———————————————————————— Dave Witherbee is a Concord native, an avid nature enthusiast, and a wildlife photographer.


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Articles inside

Breathtaking AUTUMN IN CONCORD

1min
pages 62-63

Cocktails to Inspire a Night Out

1min
page 60

Barrow Bookstore Presents: Concord Trivia

3min
page 58

Preserving the Lessons of Mid-Century Modern Architecture

5min
pages 56-57

GRAVE INSULT: The Mysterious Case of the Traveling British Soldiers' Skulls

6min
pages 52-53

THE PEOPLE OF MUSKETAQUID: Concord's First Residents

6min
pages 48-49

Thoreau Farm: A Place Where Thoreau Guides the Discussion

4min
pages 46-47

On Conscience & Kittens: The Two Minds of Nathaniel Hawthorne

4min
pages 44-45

SACRED INTEGRITY: Emerson & the Home of Transcendentalism

2min
page 42

The Healing Power of Art

3min
pages 40-41

How Do You Concord?

3min
page 30

At the Frontier of Hope: Brister Freeman

5min
pages 26-27

Stories from the Battle Road

5min
pages 24-25

A Tightly Plastered & Shingled House: Thoreau's Cabin at Walden Pond

3min
page 22

Amos Bronson Alcott: Peddler of Ideas

6min
pages 20-21

Time to Fly

2min
page 18

Surrounded by History

6min
pages 16-17

Passing the Torch: A Big Change in West Concord

6min
pages 12-13

TOP Things to See & Do in Concord this Fall

3min
pages 10-11
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