Galveston, 6 a.m.
The doves are power cooing the windows out of their frames. How did doves and lost love become synonymous? The only sadness I feel is for lost sleep. The main chorus consists of white-winged and Eurasian collared-doves. Both are immigrants. White-wings were limited in my childhood to a few scattered through oaks around the court house. Collared doves were unknown. Now both blanket the city, and I often see droves lined shoulder-to-shoulder, wingtip-to-wingtip, along the telephone wires. This morning the crowds have apparently chosen my yard for their caroling. Cucurrucucú, paloma, ya no le llores.
Within this cooing cacophony I detect the slight, almost apologetically soft flutes of the Inca dove. The Inca is also an immigrant, arriving on the island in the 1950s. The Inca survives around the edges, avoiding being bounced by the brutes. I rarely see more than a few together, quietly sifting for seeds through the scalped grass at the Ursuline Convent. The only loser to the recent immigrants is the native mourning dove. Mourning doves have been forced from many Texas urban centers out to the hinterlands.
These changes have taken place over the brevity of one lifetime – mine. I wonder how many people noticed. Perhaps the incessant noise of urban life, the auditory trash, inures us to the coming and going of nature. Our senses are cauterized, and that which we should miss never exists in the first place. Who can hear the pleadings of an amorous dove through ear buds?
Recently I drove to Rockport for a lunch meeting, and once finished curved north along the Texas Coastal Bend before returning home. Time spent along the Texas coast will leave you with two distinct impressions. First, the Texas coast is chock-a-block with birds, particularly doves. Nowhere can they be escaped. Second, also inescapable is the debris and detritus of humanity. Only in protected areas (refuges, private ranches, sanctuaries) and in a few caring towns can you avoid the abandoned double wides, scoured industrial sites, belching refineries and factories, and the tattered, sclerotic communities that define the coast. Yes, we share some of our trashiness with others around the Gulf of Mexico. The truth is inescapable – we are awash in visual and auditory trash. Humans and garbage walk hand in hand along this beach.
I confess; I am an Aldo Leopold aficionado. In college I found his writing tiring, even depressing. Now, at age 60, I hang on his every word. Here is Aldo’s take on the human existence:
One of the penalties of an ecological education is that one lives alone in a world of wounds. Much of the damage inflicted on land is quite invisible to laymen. An ecologist must either harden his shell and make believe that the consequences of science are none of his business, or he must be the doctor who sees the marks of death in a community that believes itself well and does not want to be told otherwise.
As birders, as nature watchers, we are, at least at a rudimentary level, ecologists. Perhaps our ecological interests are bottle necked (identifying birds), but I cannot imagine a sentient birder who cannot see both bush and bird. Our experiences with birds and nature should offer us a unique perspective to share with our fellow citizens currently walled off from nature.
Few of us care enough to make the effort. Birding is a game, a pastime through which we relax and escape. We are fortunate, for numbers of birds readily adapt to highly altered landscapes and our disinterest. We look for crows at dumps (aka landfills), waterfowl in settling ponds, pelagics from rip-rap jetties, and shorebirds on tidal flats created by these jetties. Most of us bird in damaged landscapes; few us of have ready access to “wilderness.”
But a park and a trash heap are different. A park is modified, but in a way that most of us find pleasing. Trash is an affront to the senses, yet people, like birds, seem to adapt to a degraded circumstance. Why?
I know the standard arguments – ignorance and poverty. But I have traveled to places where the poor did not live in squalor, where people took pride in the very little that they had scraped together in this life. Along the Texas coast, between these spellbinding protected lands, I see little pride. What I see are heaps of trash.
My family fled to Texas from hard-scrabble Mississippi immediately following the Civil War. I love my state as much as anyone, and from that attachment comes my anger and disgust. Perhaps we in conservation have spent so much time fighting for protected places that we overlooked what surrounds them. Shouldn’t conservation bleed into communities as well?
Nabokov said:
I prefer to accept only one type of power: the power of art over trash, the triumph of magic over the brute.
I hope that no one is born a brute, but I do see many (or evidence of many) who have forsaken art and beauty. Enter birding. Birds, to me, are art more than biology. If we hope to touch the insensate masses, we must use poetry and song as much as prose and science. This is the reason that so many Americans still struggle with global climate change, and, in many cases, are aggressive deniers. With all of our proof, all of our science, we have failed to give the common man the slightest reason to care.
Birds see a world at risk where our crude actions, our trash, spoils even the most rudimentary existence. But birds cannot speak for themselves. We must be their voice to testify. It is not enough to only see, to only watch.
Scream.
Ted Lee Eubanks
15 October 2010
Ted,
You bring up some good points that are food for thought… and action that we should take to make our world a cleaner and better one. Keep up the good work.
Thanks,
Jimmy
Ted, I look forward to each new Birdspert article. As always, an inspired read with excellent, well made points.
The Mayan community of Celestun in the Yucatan is a great example of how “pride in community” can turn a mountain of plastic debris into new behaviors, enhanced habitat and a more beautiful home. Check out Ninosycrias.com to find out more.
Closer to home, check out Texasbottlebill.com to see what some folks are “screaming” about and asking other Texans to scream with them!
Ted,
Your words bring me to tears of truth, and gives me encouragement to fight the hard fight . Thank you. You will be glad to know that there is a strong initiative to pass legislation this session to place a recycling refund on all aluminum, glass, and plastic beverage containers. http://www.texasbottlebill.com The valued material is sort by the individual industries, and the financial incentive of the deposits will remove the containers from our waterways, bayous, bays, and beaches to place them into the recycle stream. Texas has the opportunity to become the first Bottle Bill state on the Gulf of Mexico. It is for the birds, and the fiddlers, and swimmers from the shores to the deep blue sea. Join us! Thank you again. Patsy
Dear Ted,
I am sitting here with tears streaming down my face… I wished you lived in Ohio; I would beg you to join our team. We could use another voice as powerful and as compelling as yours
I want you to know that I, along with my team at the Black Swamp Bird Observatory, am indeed, screaming. We are screaming at city council members. We are screaming at county commissioners. We are screaming at township trustees, divisions of tourism, and private citizens. We are screaming at the media. We are screaming at Facebook friends. We are screaming at bird clubs, conservation groups, and the wind industry. We are screaming to anyone who will listen (and even those who won’t…) that placing wind turbines in highly bird-sensitive areas, areas of critical stopover habitat that impact the global populations of some species, is a horrible idea.
Noncommercial, mid-sized wind turbines (that can exceed 300 feet in height) require NO REGULATIONS. Without local level zoning, they can literally go up anywhere in the landscape and no one has to review it, not even wildlife agencies. Here in the Lake Erie Marsh Region of northwest Ohio, BSBO has been working hard for the last five years to market this area as a prime ecotourism destination. Many have criticized us for bringing “too many people to the area,” and creating “crowds of birders.” How ironic is it that those crowds of birders–and the cash they put in the coffers of local businesses–will ultimately be the one thing that could save the resource, if anything can. And that, along with using the excitement of the festival to reach out and share the joy and beauty of birds with thousands of new people, is EXACTLY why we did it in the first place.
Wind power, and the complete and utter lack of regulation on these bird and bat grinders, is just one “blemish” on the face of a planet pockmarked by environmental sores, but in our area, it is exploding into areas of critical migratory bird habitat and no one is doing anything to stop it, or even slow it down. Wind turbines are marching their way across the Lake Erie shoreline and seemingly, no one else cares. But BSBO, with the strong support of my husband, Kenn Kaufman (who has a bit of a voice in the birding community) is screaming, LOUD!
Our screams have been heard by a few and ignored by many. But, we will continue screaming, even as we put our organization–and all that we’ve worked to build it into–at great risk to do so. If you want to learn more so you can scream with us, email me.
Thank you, Ted, for all that you do to teach us and to encourage us to speak out on behalf of birds and the health of the planet. Thank you for reminding us that it is time to scream.
your conservation comrade,
~kimberly