Nemesis stories are birding’s equivalent of the Norse saga,
passed down from birder to birder in the great oral tradition at the tribal
gatherings at High Island, Whitefish Point, and Madera Canyon. The saga’s hero
must overcome insurmountable odds, traveling great distances and suffering
grievous disappointment and hardship.
He is guided only by the words of a sacred tome written by the
mysterious wizard Sibley. Along the way he meets strange and diverse characters
that aid the quest. The hero carries a magical sword forged by a shadowy dwarf
named Swarovski. In the end, he prevails and slays his nemesis. Or he dies
trying.
Forging the latest EL-50's |
Pulled from my shelf. Right is original 1939 woodpecker volume from Arthur Cleveland Bent's Life Histories series. |
Red-headed Woodpecker at Indiana Dunes State Park. (Not a Black-backed Woodpecker) |
One bird’s account struck a chord with me, and I decided I
absolutely had to make it a priority to see a Black-backed Woodpecker. (You see
where this is going, right?) I never realized there were odd woodpeckers like
this creature. It didn’t even have any red on it!
As a naturalist and ecologist (by a little bit of training
and much practice), plants and animals catch my attention not so much with a
flashy appearance but a nifty (and preferably specialized) ecological
behavior. Black-backed Woodpeckers fit
that bill. They like to eat wood-boring beetles, which they get to by chiseling
off slivers of bark from a tree trunk. They hammer away for a few seconds,
disdainfully flick aside a chunk of bark, and lap up the exposed grubs. The beetles
like freshly burned trees, and hence the woodpeckers spend a lot of time on
burned trunks. And therein lies the genius of having a charcoal black back. The
whole thing is such a beautiful lesson in ecology and evolution, I smile just
thinking about it.
So, I was a birder now and I was going to go out and see a
Black-backed Woodpecker because Black-backed Woodpeckers are awesome. Since I
lived in Michigan, arguably one of the best states for finding the things, the
quest would be simple. Then I walked out into the woods…also known as the real
world.
Several trips to the Upper Peninsula yielded no
Black-backeds. That was disappointing, but OK. I was learning birding skills
and paying my dues. Every time I stepped out of the house I was a better birder
than the trip before. I started finding lots of birds and recognizing more on
sight. I got to the point where I no longer needed to ask “Downy or Hairy”,
because it was obvious to my practiced eye. But those were the only members of
the exalted Picoides genus I was
seeing.
This Downy Woodpecker helped me look for a Black-backed, but found none in that hole. |
Then came a road trip to Newfoundland. Black-backed
Woodpeckers reside on the island of Newfoundland. I got my lifer Gray Jay and
Boreal Chickadee in the boreal forests of Terra Nova National Park. I looked
and listened for P. arcticus to no
avail.
Not a woodpecker at all, but a Gray Jay is a fine consolation prize. |
Sarah and I became so enamored of Newfoundland, we returned
the following summer. This time I was armed with reports of breeding Black-backeds
in Cape Breton Highlands National Park in Nova Scotia. We penciled in a couple
days of exploration in Nova Scotia on the trip back from Newfoundland. I found
some amazing forests in the Grand Anse Valley, but no woodpeckers.
Two years after the start of the quest, I found myself
living briefly not in southern Michigan, but the northern reaches of the “mitten”
part of the state. Black-backeds are an Upper Peninsula bird, but they aren’t
unheard of in the northern mitten, and now I had time and access to explore all
of the areas that had been burned in the past few years. Surely I’d finally see
my beloved woodpecker. No such luck. I was starting to become a decent birder,
though.
November found me in the woods on the morning of the first
big snow of the year in the UP. I was on the Peshekee Grade, an old railroad
bed-turned-to-raod through a sub-boreal stand of deep, dark forest west of
Marquette, Michigan. The stars were aligning because I had legendary Upper
Peninsula birder Skye Haas and some other seasoned searchers with me. Our small
group walked a bit on the North Country Trail through untrodden knee-deep snow.
It was one of the most peacefully beautiful hikes I’ve ever taken. Flocks of
Common Redpolls passed over and Boreal Chickadees chattered through the spruce.
Returning to the road, Skye had somehow emerged without his glasses. He
returned to the trail with one other birder to the spot he thought he’d lost
them. The rest of us decided to drive our cars a couple miles ahead to do some
road-walking from there.
Sarah and I on that morning in the Peshekee Grade. Notice the lack of Black-backed Woodpeckers. |
We found our spot and had some friendly Gray Jays visit us.
After a while, Skye pulled up and reported casually, “Had a Black-backed at the
bridge right back there.” I nearly jumped for joy at this news and left the
group shortly thereafter to check the bridge. The woods were lovely, dark, and
deep, but…there was not a hint of a woodpecker. Skye had heard or seen one in
this spot twenty minutes earlier and now there was nothing. If I had stayed to
help him hunt for his glasses, as I was thinking about doing, I would have had
the bird.
I don’t bestow the mantle of “Nemesis” lightly, but at that
moment the Black-backed Woodpecker finally met all the criteria. I had wanted
it for years. I had made many trips especially searching for that particular
bird. I was in areas known to have the bird. And now, finally, I had the last
requirement: a near miss.
This IS a Black-backed Woodpecker, taken by another legendary UP birder, J.D. Phillips on the Peshekee Grade. |
After a winter full of Snowy Owls, spring sprung and I felt
good about birding in 2012. In May, the eastern UP caught on fire. The Duck
Lake fire badly burned 21,000 acres of forest. That’s small by western
standards, but a hulking fire in Michigan. We returned from a birding excursion
in North Dakota that June to search again for the Black-backed Woodpecker. We
tried a known breeding area where they’d been reported at a two-year-old burned
area south of the Duck Lake fire. No luck.
Acorn Woodpeckers were also on my must-see list, but I got one on my first attempt. (Madera Canyon, AZ.) |
In July, we searched an area of the recent Duck Lake burn,
barely two months post-fire. Bracken fern had already blanketed the ground. The
entire area had a lingering campfire smell. We caught sight of Red Crossbills
and a roosting Common Nighthawk in broad daylight. At one point, a small red
car approached us. We were far from any habitation and most locals have beefier
vehicles than this, so I guessed I was encountering a birder. I was right. It
was a birder from Ohio and he was looking for Black-backed Woodpeckers. We discussed
the fresh shavings seen on some blackened trunks (beetle activity or woodpecker
action?) and that he thought he’d heard Black-backeds drumming earlier that
morning. I was about to press the man for more information about where else in
his career he’d seen the woodpecker when he sheepishly confided, “You know,
this bird is kind of a nemesis for me.”
I looked at his Ohio license plates, thinking about the long
trip he’d made hunting this bird. “We’re the wrong two people to run into each
other out here in the middle of the wilderness” was all I could say. We parted
with wishes of good luck in the hunt, but I had no woodpecker luck on that
trip.
A promising sign, two months after the Duck Lake burn. |
September arrived. The annual pilgrimage to Whitefish Point
to marvel at flocks of grebes and loons was on my agenda. On the way, Sarah and
I planned to once again scour the Duck Lake burn. We stopped atop a small rise
overlooking a heavily scorched area. Salvage logging was going on not too far
away, the sound of the equipment clear in the air. Then there was drumming. I
was certain it was my bird. I’m familiar enough with the drumming of the other
seven woodpeckers I commonly see in Michigan to recognize this one was
different. I grabbed the iPod and played Black-backed Woodpecker drumming to
myself beside the car, louder than I intended in my excitement. The woodpecker
responded, perhaps to my playback, with an identical drum beat. The last thing
I wanted to do was disturb the birds, no matter how badly I wanted to see one,
so I put the pod away and stood. Sarah and I heard it drum a few more times in
the distance, then not again.
I knew I had my woodpecker, but I was only 98% certain, and
that isn’t good enough for a lifer, particularly a nemesis. We got into the car
and drove about another mile to the spot where we’d seen the nighthawk earlier
in the summer. I was feeling disappointed and dejected at being so close to a
presumed Black-backed and not seeing it. We drove slowly and then we suddenly heard
the same drumming, MUCH closer. I planted the Prius in the ditch and we jumped
out. Sarah led the way into the woods, careful not to trample the bracken.
Every step crunched loudly through charcoal and brought up the aroma of burned
wood. It was impossible to move stealthily. Fifty yards into the woods, Sarah stopped and
whisper-shouted “I have it!”
I was afraid to move, every step being so loud and obnoxious
on this terrain. I tried to take one step forward with my now-elevated heart
rate and broke an unseen twig with a hideous snap. Then I saw movement as a charcoal
black bird flew up to a tree trunk 20 feet in front of me. The female
Black-backed Woodpecker poked at the bark, hammered it briefly and started
flicking off shreds. She gorged on some beetle grubs, flicked some more burned
bark, took a glance at me and flew off through the blackened trunks,
disappearing over the next rise. Four years after reading about it, I had gone
out and found the bird. I never touched my binoculars or camera, just drank in
the bird with my own eyes for 20 or 30 seconds.
Sarah walked back toward me with a big grin, congratulating
me on getting the bird. All I could think to say was, “She was flicking off
pieces bark,” as if to confirm that what it says in the books is true. But when
I tried to talk my voice broke and I knew I was going to burst into tears if I
tried to speak at that moment.
So, yeah, I got teary-eyed over a woodpecker in a burned out
woods on an otherwise non-descript September morning. If you don’t get that,
then I don’t know what I could do to explain it. If it makes perfect sense to
you, then let’s go birding.
Stunning shot of a female Black-backed Woodpecker by Perry Allen. |
And another from Perry Allen. What a gorgeous shot of an amazing bird! |
Thanks to going back and entering old lists, I have some diverse locations in eBird for my lifer woodpeckers. September 25, 2012 is still the one that means the most, though. |
An enthralling read! Well done on finally achieving seeing the bird. I'm hoping to see some - any - woodpeckers next year as we don't have them in Australia.
ReplyDeleteIndeed, an oversight on Australia's part. Then again, in looking through all the other wonders in the Australia field guide, it's hard to feel TOO sorry for you!
DeleteWhat a great story and told very well. Loved it!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful!!
ReplyDeleteGreat story! By the way, I got my lifer Red-Headed Woodpecker at Oak Openings too. :)
ReplyDeleteThat place is spectacular, and a sure-thing for Red-headeds!
Delete