When we hear [the crane's] call, we hear no mere bird. We hear the trumpet in the orchestra of evolution. He is the symbol of our untamable past, of that incredible sweep of millennia which underlies and conditions the daily affairs of birds and men.
--Aldo Leopold
Wednesday night and yesterday the sandhill cranes have been flying north to Wisconsin. Out for a walk in the late evening I heard their distinctive husky, ratchety calls, though I couldn't see them. Outside yesterday at lunch time I heard them again, those calls which sound nothing like geese, yet might be mistaken for geese if you didn't know, and this time I saw the raggedy wedge of birds beating steadily north. The light was too dull to flash off their pale cheeks or wings, as it sometimes does, but there was no mistaking their flight. The heart lifts.
Forget January 1st as the first day of the new year. Pope Gregory set that day in the 1750s when he instituted his calendar. This hearkens back to ancient Roman custom, since that was the day ancient Roman officials began their terms of office. However, the traditional day for celebrating the new year in Europe prior to Gregory was March 25th. Much more grounded in the northern hemisphere's reality, if you ask me. And there are so many other customs: for pagans, for example, the new year begins with the close of harvest in the fall, which also makes a certain nature-based sense.
The real new year comes on gradually. You can't mark it by saying one particular minute begins the new year or new season. The real new year begins now in northern Illinois, when the buds are swelling and there's a touch of green among the brown of last year's growth. When the sandhill cranes head north, and the chickadees begin their mating flights, it's time to cut down the old brown, rattling stalks to chop up for compost, and nearly time to start seeds indoors. Happy new year!
Here are my spring resolutions (besides putting in more native plants, which is not a resolution, but an established habit):
- To rejuvenate my own small polyculture lawn
- To figure out what to plant in the parkway now that I've smothered the grass
- To get the raised beds I'm planning built and prepared before the seeds I'm starting are ready to put in
- To persuade a friend who has spring beauties (Claytonia virginica) in his yard to dig some up and give them to me, since I can't find them in the nursery trade
- To do a better job of entering my citizen science data at NPN (See my post about phenophases, or go straight to the National Phenology Network for more info)
- To educate others in my neighborhood about the value of native pollinator-attracting plants, and persuade them to plant some this year
What are your spring resolutions?
Note: Learn more about sandhill cranes at the
International Crane Foundation Website. Here is a
You Tube video of cranes leaving their winter home in Gainesville, Florida for the trek north to Wisconsin.
Update: Apparently there are now breeding pairs in Illinois. See Dennis Cudworth's article,
"Sandhill Cranes Return to Illinois in Spring"
Related Posts:
Do Your Backyard Plants and Animals Display Phenophases?
Happy Spring!
Comments
I hope to visit the cranes next week during spring break, 90 minutes west. I've never seen them in person, just flying northwest overhead, like you, but even that is so much!
Heather
http://livingsoganofla.blogspot.com/2010/02/migrating-guests.html
Thanks for the comment. Native American time is something I'd like to learn more about. Didn't know about the cam, will check it out. Just learned that there are breeding pairs at a forest preserve not too far from Chicago--hope to check that out too.
Hi EE, I'll check that out.
Jenna, thanks for the link.
Of course I feel like you when I watch Tundra Swans flying overhead on their way north. Oh well,.....
Hi Dennis, Thanks for stopping by. Lucky you to have them nearby. Tundra swans, hmmm, I'll have to look them up.
Hi Fargo,
Thanks for stopping by. At first I thought North Dakota, but then realized, Rogers Park, Chicago. Lucky us, to be in that flight path!