November 16, 2007
RIVER WATCHER
WHAT A WAY TO GO!
Rex Burress
Doing my usual thing, watching the river, I was delighted to see a
kingfisher dash from its snag-lookout post and plunge into a pool, emerging
from those murky depths with a fish!
The kingfisher is among the regular cast of creatures to watch
along the Feather River, one of those resident birds you can depend on being
there. They are shy, and you can expect them to go flashing away in a rolling
flight if they think there is someone watching them.
Often they chatter as they fly away as if annoyed. Animal
character is as pronounced as the personality of a person, and you can
recognize many birds at a distance by the mere movement they make. Expert bird
watchers call it the "Zzzzz" of birding; the ability to recognize a
species by the way it acts. Nature is ever-changing, yet you can rely on the
constancy of habits.
The local species is called "Belted Kingfisher," (Ceryle
alcyon),
due to the white collar around its neck and the "belt-band" of blue
across the chest. That blueness covers the back and also their jaunty
"crew-cut"ruffled feathers on a large head, and most particularly
unique is that the female has the colorful reddish chest markings while the
male's chest is plain white. In most bird species, it is the male that sports
the color.
In family life, a pair dig a deep tunnel on a steep river bank and
attend their eggs in that darkened interior. The babes are fed in complete darkness,
and you wonder how they manage to maneuver in that dank cave, or how the young
must react to light once they leave the nest. The bank swallow is about the
only other local bird to dig tunnels for nesting.
Kingfishers are found all across America, and extend that range
into Canada in the summer when waters become clear of ice so they can use their
diving skills. It is especially thrilling to see them cruising Spanish Creek in
the upper Feather River watershed, near Oakland Camp, swooping along over
tumbling rapids and leafy rhubarb, and then settling onto their favorite snag
to watch for one of those creek rainbows!
What a way to go! Diving headfirst into the water to catch a fish!
It's the only way they know, so you will find them only where fish are present.
Can you imagine, sitting on a limb, spotting the faint sign of a proper sized
fish, and plunging hard into the dim depths trying to put the beak on
breakfast! Potential monsters live there, yet kingfishers ply their trade even
in alligator infested swamps in the south.
There aren't many birds that dive for a living. Terns do it, and
sometimes you can see the large Caspian Tern from the sea cruising up and down
the river looking over the possibilities. They are more graceful than the
kingfisher, and neatly slice the water when diving, but it's a floppy mess when
they try to get air-bourne again. Brown pelicans along the coast are the other
major birds that dive headfirst for a living. Osprey will dive onto fish going
feet-first rather than using their head.
So if you be down along the river some day, and see old Mr.
Kingfisher perform his aquatic aerobics, know that it is just another way of
life for one of the many creature's in nature's kingdom of diverse performers!
"He hath made every thing beautiful in his time..." Ecclesiastes
3:11.
"To every thing there is a season, and a time to every
purpose under the heaven."
Ecclesiastes 3:1