Archive for the ‘West Virginia cabin’ Category

Deer Wars

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

Everything I feared about Dolly appeared to be true.  As the dominant doe in our original group of four of West Virginia’s finest whitetail deer, it was basically up to her whether the the new outsiders would be accepted.  Would she share the corn feeder with the three new deer, plus the pair she’d already intimidated, or defend it for the exclusive use of her group?

I could only hope she would share.  There was plenty for her group – Ruthie, another three year old or more (and probably Dolly’s sister), plus their two yearlings Alfalfa and Darla.  I was quite optimistic considering that 50 pounds of corn was consumed from Monday night to Thursday morning.  I had watched the four deer for nearly a year and knew they could never eat that much in 60 hours.

Hopefully that meant that bossy Dolly was allowing the other five to feed.  She was tolerating it, though somewhat reluctantly no doubt. 

No chance.  Dream on.

Thursday evening, I returned home around 6:30, just an hour or so before dark.  Six deer startled as I pulled up the 300-foot gravel driveway, but they didn’t scamper right off.  They stood and stared me down, as if wondering whether I meant them any harm.  They sent me a message, “We’re hanging out.” 

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I walked from my truck to the new pole barn under construction, never lifting my head to look the transfixed deer in the eye.  I checked out the progress on the barn, sneaking peeks now and then to see if the deer were still standing and looking at me.  They were.  This only happened once in a while in the past year – when they weren’t going to leave the feeder area for others to pillage.

I got into the log cabin and within 10 minutes the hill above the feeder proved to be a battleground for warring deer.  On two separate occasions, large does attempted to approach the trough full of corn.  Both times Dolly raised her front hoofs and made an aggressive display.  They backed off.  Two outlaw yearlings, in all their innocence, also made the mistake of approaching the feeder to eat.  They were easily and summarily rebuffed.

Dolly allowed Ruthie, Alfalfa, and Darla to eat as much as they wanted while she stood guard, her head held proudly and defiantly in the air.  I almost think she was forcing them to linger at the feeder and keep chowing down, just to show the other deer her contempt for them.  Several times the foursome appeared to be leaving the feeder area, only to suddenly turn and head back, led by you-know-who.

My hope is that the other five whitetail deer will sneak back from time to time throughout the night to feed.  Over the course of the next week, Dolly will begin to accept that she can’t defend the feeder 24 hours a day.  Let the others feed.  Have compassion for those three pregnant does, who, like you and Ruthie, will be giving birth in a month.  You’re all deer.  You’re all in this thing together.

Well, we’ll see if Dolly mellows out.  My fingers are crossed.

- Mountain Man

Progress

Thursday, March 20th, 2008

My solo visits from our home in Cape May, New Jersey to our log cabin in Green Bank, West Virginia have to be productive.  It’s these times, when City Girl stays behind to run the real estate business, that I must make progress on some of the many home projects I have underway.

I arrived in Green Bank this past Sunday, with a construction crew due Monday to build a 24′ x 32′ pole barn with metal sides.  They were scheduled to be finished by Friday.  It’s one of those companies I found on the internet that does everything but the concrete floor, which gets poured after they’re done and gone.  The barn-building folks are located just 88 miles from here, so it’s just about as local as it gets.

I was there to “supervise” and make sure that critical first-day decisions were made by me, since I tend to be somewhat of a perfectionist (some say “anal”).  And supervise I did on Monday, making sure everything was done to my satisfaction.  I had to locate bags of concrete for the crew by calling around to various supply stores, then helped pick them up.  But after that it’s pretty straight forward.  I wasn’t really needed, and I wasn’t just gonna stand there and watch them work.

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To make effective use of my time, I had two local guys – my own “crew” – work with me on a tree clearing project.  I would run the chainsaw and they’d haul the cut firewood and brush.  We’d all done it together several times in the past year, so it was kinda routine now.  We knew our roles, and how hard we’d have to work to accomplish our task.  I could check in on the pole barn guys – foreman Duane, Norman and Clint – every once in a while and still run my own gig.  All five guys – my crew and theirs – are good guys and decent human beings.  What more can you ask?

We’re located in the Allegheny Mountains at an elevation of about 2,700 feet, or roughly a half mile.  So there is very little flat land – it’s all up and down and sidehill.  Cutting and hauling trees, mostly oaks, is a challenge.  The goal of this clearing was to open a view of the mountain to the east while also benefiting from more sun in the cold months.

Lew and Clinton – my guys – started work on Monday by covering a bed of shrubs with mulch, a leftover task from October.  Then they dragged all the brush I had created on my last visit in February to the burn pile.  Tuesday found us cutting and hauling for six hours.  The view was beginning to open up, but a few remaining strategic oaks still blocked the million dollar vista.

This morning, Wednesday, we tackled the last dozen trees.  Knowing it was due to start raining by noon and then rain the rest of the day and night, we hurried along.  By 11 o’clock, we were done.  Just as we walked into the cabin to get the guys their pay, the sky opened up.  We smiled a collective smile.

Meanwhile, the pole barn trio had a much less productive day.  Their usual late start combined with the rainout made the 88-mile trip over four mountain ranges almost not worthwhile.  But still, after three days, the barn is all framed out.  Tomorrow the roof will go on and the five windows will be installed.  I can’t wait to see the cupola and weathervane.  Friday the insulation and walls go up and they are finished.  A separate contractor comes one day next week to install the two garage-style doors.

Saturday, my crew, plus my main contractor Rich and sidekick Frank – will prepare the garage floor for concrete.  That entails leveling off the gravel and dirt floor, then tying rebar in a checkerboard pattern for extra strength.  We had planned on pouring the concrete on Monday or Tuesday, but with low temperatures expected to be about 20 degrees each morning that was out of the question.

By the time I head back to New Jersey on Sunday, the barn will be standing and lacking only the two cement trucks worth of concrete which we’ll tackle in two weeks when I return.  The breathtaking view of Sunrise Mountain, so named by me due to the sun rising over its peak on winter mornings, is ready for City Girl to admire and enjoy on her next visit.  All in all, my seven days in Green Bank will be remembered as satisfyingly productive.  As usual!

- Mountain Man

Nine and Counting

Wednesday, March 19th, 2008

I arrived at our West Virginia cabin this past Sunday, March 16.  Now early afternoon Wednesday, March 19, the rain pours down and I sit reflecting on the events that have shaped the last three and a half days.  A lot has happened, which I’ll expound on in my next blog.

This is a story about the local white-tail deer that share our 19 acres.  Since moving into the cabin a year ago, we have come to recognize the individual deer.  The first regulars to the corn feeder we dubbed “Our Gang”.  There were two fawns, now yearlings, and two adult mothers.  We nicknamed the youngsters Darla and Alfalfa, and the mature mothers Dolly and Ruthie, for our own two mothers. 

We watched them interact, and quickly knew the pecking order.  It was Dolly, Ruthie, Alfalfa, then lastly, Darla.  After a few months, another mother and six-month old showed up.  They stood off 30 feet, waiting for Our Gang, the dominate group, to feed first.  When the two groups got real close to one another, it got tense.  Dolly would occasionally assert her authority with slashing hoofs.  Sometimes we’d see this new aloof pair around the feeder, and sometimes not for a while.  But it did bring the resident count to six deer.

Yesterday afternoon, the two work crews left around 4:30 after a good accomplishment day.  Ten minutes later I walked past the kitchen window and noticed three deer partway up the hill, guessing them to be from “Our Gang”.  Moments later, I looked up and saw another group coming in from a different direction.  My pulse jumped.

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Discreetly, I peered out the windows and finally settled on there being nine deer.  The trough that holds the feed corn is six feet long, with accessibility from both sides.  As many as six deer at a time were munching on corn or licking the new apple-flavored salt block located in the trough at one end.  I was grinning ear to ear.  I couldn’t wait to tell City Girl.

I stood and studied this menagerie of white-tail deer.  There were four yearlings, three two-year olds, and two that were three years old or more – Dolly and Ruthie.  The two year olds have a more immature face, with the snout still not extended like the older deer.  I pondered these three two-year olds who would each be giving birth for the first time in about a month.  They wouldn’t be teenagers anymore!

Then I saw the big picture.  Dolly and Ruthie will each have a fawn, as will the three first-time mothers.  That means pretty soon there will be five new fawns – learning, exploring, and bonding.  That brings the local population to 13 deer.  How exciting!

But then I wonder – will they all stick around?  Will bossy Dolly share her domain or drive off the others?  There’s a mountain behind our property with a few hundred acres.  Surely, they share the mountain.  Can’t they share coming to the feeder?

My attention turns back to the five pregnant does.  Oh boy, new fawns are coming.  I’m as ready as an expectant father!

- Mountain Man

Rubber Necking

Monday, February 11th, 2008

I’ve always been a person who is curious.  How, what, when, where, why?  My mind is usually in gear, whether I want it to be or not.  It can be a blessing, or occasionally a curse.

I left our log cabin in Green Bank, West Virginia around noon on Saturday.  I had expected to leave near dusk, but an impending rain/ice/snow storm hastened my departure.  This would be the first time since October I had made the 408 mile trip back to New Jersey in the daylight.  It would mean more traffic than night driving, but it would also mean I could be nosey.

Winter is the perfect time to scope out everything.  With no leaves on the trees, I could see far into the woods and farther into everyone’s property.  A combination of valley farms and mountain homes awaited me in West Virginia, then sprawling valleys with farms and suburbs would usher me through Virginia and Maryland.

I don’t usually make this trip on a Saturday.  Once on the road, I was immediately struck by what a social day it was.  With temperatures in the mid 40’s, mountain folks were outside talking to neighbors, fixing fences, cutting and splitting firewood, working on cars, and riding ATV’s in their yard.  These weren’t the kind of activities you’d find during the weekdays, and  they occurred to a much lesser degree on a Sunday.

In farm country, I started to check out every barn.  Now mid-February, how much hay did they have left?  How much corn silage did the dairy farms still have?  What kind of equipment did they have?  Are their tractors, combines, and wagons kept under cover or out in the elements?

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Were the barns well maintained?  Freshly painted?  Did the farmhouse have Rockwellian appeal or was it neglected?  Was there a picket fence around the house?  Maybe a few fruit trees in the yard?  Are there dead cars parked out back?

I’m equally as interested in the livestock.  Are the cattle looking well fed?  Are the sheep looking fit?  Are these livestock kept in an area large enough that they have a clean place to lay down, or are they caked in dried mud?  I came across a flock of about 30 sheep outside Franklin, WV.  They had beautiful, immaculately clean white coats with black faces.  They looked like something out of a child’s book.  I was impressed.  It brought a smile to my face.

I also enjoy looking at general stores and the nostalgia they impart, churches and their varying steeples, bridges, and waterways.  After much rain of late, the creeks and rivers were rushing torrents compared to back in the autumn when they were trickles.

My six and a half hour trip back to New Jersey was full of interesting, thought-provoking, heart-warming sights.  I was rubber necking the whole way.  It makes me wonder – do other people get as much pleasure tripping in America as I do?

- Mountain Man

Our Gang

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

When I arrive in at our log cabin in Green Bank, West Virginia, the first thing I do is head for the basement to get a 50 pound bag of corn and a 20 pound bag of birdseed.  I want “our gang” to have food out and available the first time they pass through.

The corn feeder is built between two trees, and it’s located about 25 feet from our dining room window.  The feeder is six feet long, nine inches wide, and two and a half inches deep.  It has a shingled roof above to keep the feed dry.  Within about 10 minutes of my arrival it is brimming with dried corn, a favorite meal of many of our forest friends.

The bird feeder is next.  It is suspended from a pipe 14 feet in the air attached between two trees, which are wrapped in brown metal flashing to keep the bears, raccoons, and squirrels from raiding the feeder.  A pulley system is used to raise and lower the feeder.  I put a ladder against the tree, climb up and untie the rope, and let the bird feeder slowly descend to the ground.  Lifting the lid, the entire 20 pounds of seed fits into the homemade feeder.  Then it’s pulled back up, the rope is tied off, and the ladder goes back into the basement.

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Now that the wildlife food is put out, I can go about emptying my truck of the clothes, groceries and other things I’ve brought from New Jersey.  The big question now is - who will arrive first to begin feeding?

When I arrived here in West Virginia the other day, a Wednesday, it took about five hours before I saw a black-capped chickadee in the bird feeder.  Once again, he led the way.  I can always count on him to get the word out, and he didn’t let me down.  Within a few hours, the feeder looked like a bus depot, with nuthatches, juncos, tufted titmice, finches, and sparrows dashing in and out for seed.

The corn feeder usually takes longer to attract attention.  The first day there was no action.  At first light on Thursday morning, I saw a red squirrel making his herky-jerky march to the feeder.  A minute later, another red squirrel joined him.  Wow, this was a first.  I’d never seen two red squirrels at once before, thinking there was only one. 

In another few minutes, their arch enemy arrived – a gray squirrel.  “Oh, this will be fun,” I thought.  The gray squirrel chased the reds up and down the two trees, but it was hard for him to keep two reds at bay.  He’d chase one and the other would quickly scamper to the feeder to grab a kernel of corn.  The battle for dominance of the feeder was on.

Not so fast, my friends!  Two white-tailed deer appeared, both born last spring and now about 10 months old, that we named Alfalfa and Darla.  They quickly asserted their authority and took over the feeder.  The squirrel battle was now a mute point.  They would have to wait until the deer were through eating.

Alfalfa and Darla were spotted fawns, only a month old or so, when we first spotted them last spring with their mothers.  They were so much fun to watch.  At that age, they can suddenly break into a run as if testing out their legs.  Just as suddenly, they’ll stop and act as if nothing just happened.

Alfalfa and Darla, perhaps since they grew up around us, are much more accepting of our presence than their mothers, whom we named Dolly and Ruthie after our own mothers.  Those two adults, probably now three years old, have an inherent distrust of us that was probably ingrained through surviving a couple hunting seasons.  Who can blame them?  They tolerate us, but that’s all.

Throughout the day, the four deer and 30 or so birds would pop in and out.  Eat a while, then leave.  They all seemed content knowing that while the human was around, a family-style buffet was being served.

- Mountain Man

Primitive Pondering

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

The location of our log cabin here in Green Bank, West Virginia, lends itself to deep thought.  Located at 2,700 feet elevation, our valley is surrounded by mountain ranges that tower nearly a thousand feet higher.  These “hills” are much like Mother Nature’s drive-in movie screen.  They are a palette for great sunrises on the western hills and breathtaking sunsets on the eastern hills.  The colors they display, from red to pink to orange to purple, are almost surreal in their beauty.

With such a sparse population for at least 50 miles in every direction, there is no light intrusion at night.  No lights from cities, malls, car dealerships, and such mean that the night sky can display all its true depth and splendor without compromise.  Last night, in a cloudless sky, the stars shown radiant.  The stars seemed to be suspended from a large black dome, enveloping our planet like a bubble.

With all this raw magnificence displayed at our mountain locale, it takes my mind back to the pre-industrial era on our world, even before the human race subjucated the earth to our dominance.  For lack of a better word and to make it easier to comprehend, I’ll say the “caveman” era.

How did homo erectis and homo sapiens rationalize those very natural phenomenon that we can now explain through science?  How did a wandering, hunter-gatherer from 15,000 years ago deal with the earth’s daily displays?

Let’s take a clan from an era in the earthman’s evolution where language was rudimentary, but communication was possible.  Let’s assume that the clan had a leader, leaders, or at least a wise elder.

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When a magnificent sunset threw glorious reds and oranges into the clouds, how did the leader explain that?  What about lightning and thunder, how could that fit into their lives?  Even the changing seasons – why did the earth flourish and nourish the plants and then in turn get bitterly cold?  What was the sun, the moon?  What was an eclipse?  What were the stars?  What was rain, what was snow, what was fog?  What is a rainbow?  The leader would have to calm the fears of his people.  He’d have to become a thinker, or at least a good salesman to alleviate their doubts.

And so … religion was born.  Without science, the answers would have to come from somewhere else.  Explain the unexplainable.  It must be the gods.  They are mad at us, they are pleased with us.  They sit above in some great kingdom, exerting their dominance and influence over us.  We must pray to them, offer sacrifice, appease their egos.  We were created in their image to be subservient to them. 

Okay, you get the picture.  Without science, religion was invented to calm the uneducated, unsophisticated masses.  The need to explain was met.

As I stood last night beneath the bright, inspiring stars, I pondered what those primitive ancestors must have thought.  Then I saw a shooting star and took it for exactly what is was – a beautiful thing!

- Mountain Man

Tranquility

Saturday, February 9th, 2008

It’s my next to last day at our log cabin in Green Bank, West Virginia.  Tomorrow evening I’ll be heading back to New Jersey, so after as full day today of cutting downed trees into firewood length pieces, I headed out about 3:45 to run some errands.

After a stop at the bank to refresh my funds, I headed north on Route 92.  Less than a mile beyond the bank, I spotted a bald eagle sitting in the very top of a 60-foot dead tree.  He had a panoramic view of the fields to his west and the river to his east.  No mouse or vole or squirrel would sneak past him.

I was struck by how regal he looked, and his posture took on a sense that he may just know how important he is.  Could it be?  Does a bald eagle know that he is revered by Americans?  Am I forcing my perception?

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I slowed down and watched him as I passed by at 30 mph.  Maybe it was my imagination, but it seemed as though he was watching me, too.  Staring, even.  Had my powerful feeling of awe been exposed to him?  He was looking down at me from top of that the big tree, but was he looking down at me, figuratively?  Did he know he was regarded as great?  I had no answers, just questions.

I proceeded to take care of the rest of my chores, my thoughts never too far from the image of his white head and brown body with pumped up chest.  It wasn’t the first bald eagle I’d ever seen, but the feeling that he was checking me out as much as I was him left me spellbound.

Near dusk, I headed back south on Route 92 toward Green Bank.  The deer were in almost every large field getting their last nibbles of brown, dormant grass before nightfall.  The 12 mile drive found me counting 77 deer.  They were unperturbed by passing cars.  Perhaps they knew that hunting season had passed, and they were safe until the following autumn.  Maybe it was safety in numbers.  Maybe hunger outweighed fear.

When I passed the field where the bald eagle had held court, I was transfixed on the top of that dead tree.  The bald eagle was gone, as I expected, but his ghostly aura remained in my mind.  I will never look at that tree the same way, again.  He’ll always be in it.

I turned off Route 92 for the final 2.5 miles up a small, winding, paved road to our cabin.  The cattle, often sharing their fields with the peaceful deer, were also getting their last mouthfuls of grass.  I spotted a young white calf suckling the nipples of its brown mother.  I flashed back to my days as a dairy farmer.  The calves had such a unique and pleasing aroma, maybe even the odor of innocence. 

I thought of their sweet milk breath.  It was much like a baby’s breath and smells.  It’s so sweet – that’s the only way to describe it.  When I smell that, I just want to hold the calf or baby and give them hugs and kisses.

The stately bald eagle, the aloof deer, and the sweet calf combined to leave me with one feeling – tranquility.  Feeling whole and wholesome and connected to the cycle of nature.  Isn’t life grand?!

- Mountain Man

Mind Games

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

When doing something routine or mundane, do you ever catch yourself playing a mind game to make the chore easier to tolerate?  I do.  It may be something as simple as counting the stairs every time you walk up them or knowing how many rows you will need to mow to finish the lawn.  Numbers can be a great companion, and milestones bring a sense of proper place and accomplishment to the errand.

A few hours ago, I completed another 408 mile solo journey from New Jersey to our log cabin here in West Virginia.  When I travel with City Girl, there are always interesting conversations to pass the time.  But alone, I need to occupy my mind, lest I become drowsy.  And traveling in total darkness, as I did last night, doesn’t leave scenery as an option to draw my interest.

I began my trip at 7pm (okay, actually 6:58).  I play CD’s as I drive, so I started off with my usual Andy Williams “Super Hits”, beginning with ‘Moon River’.  It normally takes me one hour, five minutes to get to the Delaware Memorial Bridge.  I was right on the mark.  Now in on I-95 in Delaware, I played Rod Stewart’s “Great American Classics”, including ‘The Way You Look Tonight’.  The CD finished in Maryland, where I changed to “The Best of the Glenn Miller Orchestra”, featuring ‘Chattanooga Choo Choo’.

I’m singing and humming tunes and find that I’ve knocked off 200 miles in exactly three hours.  At 220 miles, I stop to refuel at the same all-night mini-mart I always stop at.  Duke Ellington’s “Greatest Hits”, with ‘Satin Doll’, was setting the mood.  I know I’ve got 188 miles left, so I’ve passed the magical halfway plateau, a psychological barrier.

On to Virginia via I-81, a place where I got a speeding ticket last October.  I’ve learned to go slow in Shenandoah County, near Woodstock, where the state police have nothing constructive to do other than bag speeders and generate revenue.  I go through this time with a fusion jazz CD from the early ’70s, Chick Corea’s Return to Forever “Hymn of the Seventh Galaxy”.  If I can’t go fast, at least I can have fast music.  I’ll show them.

At Harrisonburg, the home of James Madison University, I leave the interstate.  It’s small, winding state highways the rest of the way to Green Bank, West Virginia, site of our log cabin.  Even though I have 88 more miles to go and it will take one hour, 40 minutes, I always feel like I’m almost home at this point.  It’s time for the John Denver CD, starring ‘Country Roads’.  I’m in the mood.

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I climb over Shenandoah Mountain and I’m in West Virginia.  I drop into the valley and the hamlet of Brandywine, then climb over South Fork Mountain.  Descending into Franklin, the Pendleton County seat, this is the only “real” town I’ll see in WV.  Then it’s up over North Mountain, the third of four 3,500+ foot high mountains I must scale.  I plunge into tiny Circleville, knowing there’s just one more mountain range to climb.  Soon, a behemoth brown sign with white letters, “Monongahela National Forest”, announces my entrance into familiar territory, my backyard so to speak.

At the top of Allegheny Mountain, I spot an old friend, “Entering Pocahontas County” the road sign proclaims.  “Yes!”, I think, “I’m home”.  The stars are shining in the clear night sky.  Deer cross the road in front of me on three different occasions, ushering their “hello, welcome back”.  The CD from the motion picture “A Prairie Home Companion” seems a fitting finale.  Garrison Keillor is a master of imparting that warm, fuzzy feeling through comedy and down home music.

At 1:24 am, after 6 hours and 26 minutes travel time, I pull into my driveway and cruise up the hill to the log cabin.  I hear the neighbor’s donkey (or is it a mule or burro?) braying, a sheep bleeting with its baritone voice, and an owl hooting in the distance.  It’s nice to be back … and it wasn’t such a long trip.  It’s merely mind over matter.

- Mountain Man

Birds Have Character

Thursday, January 31st, 2008

I have been a bird watcher, or birder as they now call it, since the 1970’s.  I pulled out my “life list” the other day, a list that names every kind of bird that I’ve ever seen and positively been able to identify.  I need to make a half dozen additions to the list, but the list stood at 128 birds.  That’s not bad, but real serious birders have seen 300 or more.

I carry my Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds, Eastern Region edition, any time I go on a hike.  At this stage of my life, most all my hikes are in New Jersey or West Virginia, my two homes.  But having lived in coastal southern California, Oregon, Montana, Florida, and the Virgin Islands gave me the opportunity to see birds not seen here in the mid-atlantic United States.

It may sound ridiculous, but I do have favorite birds.  And birds I frankly don’t care for.  Is that weird?  Here are my favorite tree and ground birds.  I’ll save marsh and water birds for another time.

My favorite bird is the black-capped chickadee.  No matter how cold the winter, he cheerily comes to your feeder.  When it was 30 degrees below zero in Maine, the black-capped chickadee could be counted on to be at the feeder at first light and check in all day long.

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My best camouflaged bird award goes to the dark-eyed junco.  From above, an airborne predator has a hard time distinguishing his black upper body and black eyes.  From below, the dark-eyed junco in flight has an-off white underside that blends well with the sky.

Several birds capture the honors for prettiest bird.  I love the brilliant red male cardinals; the summer yellow and black plumage of an American goldfinch; the same yellow and black of the larger evening grosbeak; the red, white and black of a rose-breasted grosbeak; and the black spotted red-orange and gray of an American kestrel.

Most distinguished looking bird is a two way tie.  I love the stately look of the cedar waxwing, the black mask across his eyes oozing class.  I’m also partial to the tufted titmouse.  This little guy stands so upright, as if he’s gone to finishing school.  His white breast is the white tuxedo shirt, his gray back the tuxedo with tails, and his tuft is the latest hair fashion.

Now the flip side.  I hate starlings.  These boogers were introduced from Europe in 1890.  About 100 were released in Central Park.  Now there’s hundreds of millions crowding out our native birds.  Go home!

They pal around with grackles, the “darth vader” of the bird feeder.  Together, along with a few red-winged blackbirds, these three species congregate in gangs of 300 or more.  They are jerks, cleaning out a day’s worth of bird seeds in a matter of minutes.  Then the mellow birds I enjoy watching have to look elsewhere.

Ugliest bird you gotta love goes to the turkey vulture.  They have that hairless, wrinkled, red-skin head.  But to watch a dozen sitting on a fence after a rainstorm airing out their wings is a sight to see.  It is a thing of beauty.

The scaredy cat award goes to the mourning dove.  Step out the door, they freak out and fly frantically for their lives.  Walk in front of a window, they go nuts.  I’m surprised they’re not afraid of the sunrise.

Two more birds are on my favorite list.  I like them equally, though Ben Franklin would take issue with me.  Bring on the bald eagle and wild turkey.  Hand in hand they represent Americana and our proud way of life.

- Mountain Man

The Neighbor

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

Earlier this month, January 2008, I traveled to our West Virginia cabin to spend a few days.  I needed to meet with our builder, our excavation guy, and cut a few trees to open up a mountain vista to the east. 

When I arrived at 9am on a Friday morning, the temperature was 6 degrees.  It had been 1 degree a few hours prior.  I worked throughout the weekend and accomplished my tasks.  By Monday, my last day, it was a balmy 62 degrees.  I decided to spend the day hiking and exploring.  I felt like a school kid skipping class!

There is a couple hundred acre parcel behind our 19 acres that leads up to the crest of the small mountain.  I had never explored it, so I headed up the mountain on our road.  Soon I was climbing over the gate onto the neighbor’s property.  There were no structures on the land, and only hunters ever went up there.

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I traveled up the dirt road, gradually gaining elevation.  Meadows opened up to the north, a sight I don’t see on our heavily wooded parcel.  Soon I was to an area where thick pine trees clustered along the north side of the road, but they grew from a 20-foot lower creekside area, so only the top 10 feet were exposed to me.  They shown brilliant light green in the full winter sun.

Suddenly, a large bird the size of a crow burst from one of the pines and landed in another 100 feet ahead.  Was that a pileated woodpecker?  Could it possibly be?

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I proceeded slowly up the road, knowing that I would come upon him again.  Sure enough, as I got close, he launched out of the tree.  His wings beating made a definite noise, almost a thumping.  They were so powerful that I swore I felt the vibrations.

His large size and pronounced red pointed head confirmed that it was a pileated woodpecker.  If indeed the ivory-billed woodpecker is extinct, then the pileated is now the largest woodpecker in North America.

He and I continued our hide and seek game.  Twice more he flew 100 feet at a shot, landing in the pines ahead of me along the road.  When he tired of my presence, he flew away from the road to the edge of a dense forest.  Each time, his wings beating foretold that he was airborne again.

Now he hung to the edge of the forest, heading parallel to the road and back where we started.  My view of his trajectory was unobstructed, so I continued to follow his progression.  I didn’t move a muscle except for the slight turning of my head.

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After 10 or 15 minutes, he finally flew deep into the woods.  I had seen him in flight six times.  I heard him fly three other times.

My hike continued another couple hours, but all the time I kept thinking about him.  How magnificent he was!  How fortunate I was to share some time with him.

I will be going back up the mountain the next time I’m in West Virginia.  I expect to visit my feathered friend again.  It’s the neighborly thing to do!

Mountain Man