Pilgrims of the sky
Geetha Iyer
“Ethereal minstrel! pilgrim of the sky!…” is how William Wordsworth begins his poem ‘To a skylark’. Birds are unique among Nature’s creation, in being able to instantly connect with something deep within you, in a way no other creature is able to. No wonder then that birds figure in all forms of art, be it poetry, painting, textile design, sculpture or an evocation. From the sublime to the surreal, and the serious to the silly, birds are there everywhere in life. If the first line of William Wordsworth touched the deep chords within your heart, this limerick from Edward Lear’s, ‘A Book of Nonsense’, will have you laughing away:
There was an Old Man with a beard,
Who said, ‘It is just as I feared!
Two Owls and a Hen,
Four Larks and a Wren,
Have all built their nests in my beard!’
Owls, larks, cuckoos, wrens, warblers, or sunbirds, it is so easy to watch birds. You see some and many you simply hear. But do we? January is that special season that all birdwatchers, amateurs and professionals alike look forward to. They scramble to various places to observe, record, discuss those feathered friends that have migrated from the colder regions of the earth to our country. And on specified days in January the experts carry out a ‘waterfowl census.’ This is an exercise in bird census, to keep track of their migration, numbers, etc. For those interested in bird watching or wanting to know more about birds, this exercise is a good place to begin. Almost all cities have Natural History or Nature related societies that have expert birdwatchers, who will allow you to join and learn from them. Watching them is as interesting as watching birds, for this is the one time all adults become children, jumping around, shouting in joy, and generally behaving in a manner that is less adult like and more childlike.
But you don’t have to wait for the migratory season to see birds. Some of them are residents and live amongst us, only we don’t notice them. I share with you some birds that do not migrate but stay where they are all year around; and some that make their appearance around October and return around February when summer sets in.
Birds can be a topic of study not just in biology or environment science but even in maths, chemistry, physics, social sciences, economics, languages, art or music – in short for a topic in any subject.
The author is a consultant for science and environment education. She can be reached at scopsowl@gmail.com.