The Mighty Eagle (and some belligerent crows)

I first saw the eagle on Moberly Road, at sunrise. I heard a funny noise, somewhere between a peep and a cough, and looked up to discover this gawking at me —

Stop looking at me, bird.

— clearly contemplating my viability as snack material —

— whereupon I made a funny noise, somewhere between a shriek and a rude word. The eagle cocked its head, and did a pugilistic sort of shoulder-shrug, like a boxer loosening up between rounds. It was maybe twenty feet above me, cradled in a tangle of boughs. It was big: several times the size of the Cooper’s hawk I saw last summer — big enough to bend the branches. Big enough to be imposing, with only its top third poking over the branches. It was pointy: beak, feathers, and I couldn’t see its claws, but I’m sure those were plenty sharp, too. It was alert: somehow, I’d captured its full attention.

Though its feet were not in view, I could feel it shifting from one to the other. I couldn’t help picturing it swooping down on my head. I was afraid to look away. I mean, what if it did decide I looked tasty? I’d hear wings, look up, and the last thing I’d see would be a great manky set of eagle talons, coming for my face.

Confronted with death on wings, naturally, I ran for my life grubbed a bit of paper out of my pocket, and scribbled down its essential features: pale, pale eyes; heavy, scowling brows; feathers fluttering in the breeze; very sharp beak — did I mention its beak? — its very, very sharp beak — its wicked, hooked, vicious beak, its nasty, eviscerating beak — and did I mention I’d just seen a photo of a bird of prey ripping a mouse’s face off, a couple of days before this encounter? Seriously — it’s on Bird Light Wind — look for yourself! And that bird wasn’t nearly as big as the one looming over my head.

I hadn’t brought my camera, owing to the sun scarcely being up, but once I’d got the eagle sketched, I decided I had to try for a photo. I don’t see a lot of eagles, round here. Come to think of it, I don’t see a lot of eagles anywhere. In fact, I’d never seen a wild eagle before, in my life. So I told it to stay right there (because birds usually listen to me; really, they do), and ran for my camera. Or started to. Of course, as soon as my back was turned, the blasted bird took to the skies. Hardly sporting! I stood dejected, watching it vanish over the rooftops, figuring that was the last glimpse of eagle I’d get.

Fortunately, I was wrong. Maybe half an hour later, I was slumped on my balcony chair, inking my eagle sketch and lamenting my lost photo op, when a great commotion of caws came drifting across the creek. I grabbed my camera, just in time to spot the eagle getting harassed by the neighbourhood crows. (Fair warning: the following photos are absolute rubbish — the eagle was on the other side of Leg In Boot Square, and I was afraid it’d be gone already, if I went over to find it. Plus, it was dismally overcast, the sun wasn’t all the way up, and a light fog was down. But I had to get something, so I’d know I didn’t dream it. And I really mean that. I dream of excellent bird sightings all the time, and wake up wondering if I saw the birds before or after drifting off.)

An eagle in flight, being harassed by crows

An eagle in flight, being harassed by crows

Funny, how these crows can be so intimidated by gulls at the feeder, but they’ll divebomb a bloody eagle all morning.

Again and again, the crows dropped from the sky, beak-first, like angry darts!

Again and again, the crows dropped from the sky, beak-first, like angry darts!

The eagle had chosen the crows’ favourite tree for its roost. I’m not joking, either: that tree’s full of crows every morning and evening. They love it. The eagle’s arrival was like…well, imagine a huge, terrifying dork trying to sit at the cool kids’ table. Like that. Lots of noise and indignation.

The crows are unafraid.  Unfortunately, so is the eagle.

The crows are unafraid. Unfortunately, so is the eagle.

The crows kept at it all morning.

The crows kept at it all morning.

While I watched the crows, my downstairs neighbour came out on his balcony, and blazed up a doob. When I leaned way out over the railing and looked down, I could just see his socked foot, protruding over the edge of his footstool. He was twitching his toe. I think I got second-hand high again, because while I was watching the eagle through my camera’s lens, a song sparrow landed right next to me, and the sound of its little feet scared me half to death. I also thought I could feel the vibration of it hopping along the railing, through my elbows (which were also on the railing). That’s not possible, is it? Is it? Anyway, my coat smells like marijuana, now. Thanks a lot, neighbour.

Every once in a while, the crows got tired, and sat down for a break.

Every once in a while, the crows got tired, and sat down for a break.

While I watched the eagle, a gull came and watched me. It was waiting for me to get out of the way, so it could use the feeder. The crows and sparrows didn’t care; they hopped right in, scarcely sparing me a second glance.

Also, this happened.

Buh?

I was glad to thwart the gull.

Partial Victory over the Duck

Far out on the waters of False Creek, beyond the reach of my longest lens, they lurk: little white diving ducks, with black masks and collars. Though I’ve yet to get close enough for a photo, I was able to jot down this sketch —

It's a bufflehead!

It’s a bufflehead!

— and thereby identify my sly duckish quarry: it’s a bufflehead. Bufflehead! There’s a funny word, and a new bird for my list. Happy holidays to me! (I’m feeling rather smug.)

Still, I must get a photo. A drawing’s all well and good, for identification purposes, but it’s awfully general, isn’t it? You scribble it down in the field; you take it home and finish it up, and somewhere between scribble and finish, you lose the particular bird you spotted, and end up with little more than a diagram of birdliness — a set of observations, neatly inked, which, put together, make a bufflehead, or a pipit, or a gull. I suppose I could’ve drawn the moment the bird broke forth from the water, or the moment it dove, or the little flappy dance it did on the ripples’ surface, but then I’d have lost something of the shape and the markings, and I might not have remembered it well enough to be certain of its identity, by the time I got home.

Ah, well. Enough complaints — I’ve found a new bird! In the days before cameras, having a new bird and a clear sketch of it would’ve made for a glorious day’s birding. I’ll call today’s find an analogue sighting, to be upgraded to digital at a time to be determined.