WILLIAMSVILLE — I was asked recently what my favorite bird is. Before I could answer, the interrogator said, “My favorite bird is the chickadee.”
Implicit was a challenge that dared me to disagree. I always dance around that question, even if no one is challenging me. There are just too many birds out there to narrow the choice down to one.
That said, a good argument can be made for the chickadee being your favorite bird, and it's one of my favorites as well.
“Chickadee” is the common name given to a group of birds that talk with one another, and occasionally to us, with some variation of “chick-a-dee-dee-dee.”
There are seven chickadee species in North America, all in the genus Poecile. Three are found in eastern North America.
The Carolina Chickadee is the southern species that ranges about as far north as southern Pennsylvania; it has not been recorded in Vermont.
The Boreal Chickadee is the brown-capped inhabitant of northern boreal forests. It is common in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom. On rare occasions during the winter, it might roam as far south as Windham County. “Our” chickadee is the Black-capped Chickadee.
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Back to my interrogator, who immediately followed her declaration by adding, “They stick around all year.”
Very true. The Black-capped Chickadee is a year-round resident. I have long suspected that the chickadees that I feed in the summer are more or less the same chickadees that I feed in the winter.
Then I stumbled on a chickadee account, drawn from good chickadee studies, which told me that in the fall chickadees form flocks of three to 12 individuals, stake claim to a 20-acre feeding area, and pretty much stay in that area until the hormones start flowing in the spring.
This all but confirms that the chickadees which came to my feeder this morning are the same ones which have been coming since the first snow flew back in late October, and maybe before that. They are tough little birds.
Chickadees rarely move very far from where they were hatched. More than 60,000 Canadian banding records collected from 1921 to 1995 show that 90 percent of recaptured birds show no movement.
When there is movement among the chickadees, it is almost entirely young birds doing the moving, though a severe food shortage might also cause movement by older adults.
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However, there must be additional reasons for claiming the chickadee as the favorite bird beyond their every-day-of-the-year presence in our neighborhoods.
Remember that House Sparrows and Rock Pigeons also maintain a year-round presence, and they do so even on the barren concrete and asphalt streets in the downtown.
These birds are hardy winter residents and survivors through the worst New England winters, just as the chickadees are. But no one in his or her right mind would place either of these non-native birds anywhere close to a list of favorite birds, much less name either as a favorite bird.
What is it, then, that would justify someone naming the chickadee as his or her favorite bird?
First, I have to admit to what I have written in the past. I have two chapters in my book, Tails of Birding, that argue that we should never call a bird “cute.” (I suggest that you beg, borrow, or buy the book and find out why.) I have received lots of friendly flak for those essays, but I stand by them.
However, I have never considered consistency as a virtue. The chickadee can qualify as your favorite bird because it is so darned cute.
It has one of the perkiest, most endearing personalities of any creature I know, feathered or not. When I put seed out in the morning, I hear a thank-you “chick-a-dee-dee” as soon as I finish and return to the house.
“Thank you” seems to be fading from the vocabulary of my own species. If I am late putting the seed out, I am greeted with a scolding “chick-a-dee-dee,” but it is then followed by gratitude.
Chickadees are curious little birds. Sometimes I stand in the woods or near a thick tangle on a roadside. I won't hear or see a single bird. Then I begin to “phish, phish, phish.”
In moments, chickadees come near to check things out. They might bring a few friends like a woodpecker or a nuthatch, but they lead the way.
They come close to check out the source of the phishing. Am I friend or foe? Could I possibly be food?
Their response when they see me will explain why they are not my absolute favorite bird. When they see me, they utter an exasperated “chick-a-dee” and fly off. It is as though they were saying, “Oh, it's just you.”
Toward many people, chickadees are very friendly, almost tame. They will land on a person's head. They will eat out of a human hand.
I have never had one do that, probably for two reasons. I have never taken the time or had the patience to establish that kind of a friendly relationship. And I have cats. They are indoor cats, but they like to sit on the kitchen table and watch the birds come to the birdfeeders, especially the window feeder.
When the chickadee lands there, it can see the cat inside. That presents a barrier to a close chickadee-human relationship. How can any bird trust a human who would tolerate a cat? Chickadees are bright little birds.
When a hawk is in the neighborhood, Blue Jays raise a racket. They send out the alarm. So do chickadees. They don't have the vocal capacity of the jays, but they are right there with their warning calls: “ChickadeedeedeeChickadeedeedee.”
Chickadees not only call in reinforcements, they also get right into the fray. They join the jays in harassing the hawk.
I once watched chickadees raise the first alarm on a Cooper's Hawk, a bird-eating predator. They were joined by a flock of jays and a couple of woodpeckers.
A Cooper's Hawk stands about 16.5 inches and weighs 1.0 pound. The Blue Jay stands 11 inches and weighs 3 ounces. The chickadee is 5.25 inches in height and tips the scale at about 1/3 ounce.
The chickadees led the first attack. They ceded their field position (or is it aerial position?) as soon as the gang of jays arrived, but who can blame them?
The woodpeckers rattled alarm from the safety of a tree trunk. The cardinal hid in the bushes and the doves flew off across the river. You have to like the chickadees; they are bold and gutsy.
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“Chick-a-dee-dee-dee” is not the chickadee's song; it is the chickadee's call. It is the everyday language it uses to talk with its own kind, share food sources, tell of dangers, and thank me for finally putting out the seed.
On mild winter days, and when spring finally makes its fitful appearance, the chickadee begins to sing. The song consists of a low, sweet, whistled “phe-be,” or “fee beeyee.” It is easy to miss the song.
Chickadees are cavity nesters. They use old Downy Woodpecker holes. If they can't find a woodpecker hole, they make their own nest hole in an old tree trunk. They have small, delicate beaks, so the tree has to be soft and well rotted.
I have found chickadee-excavated nests a couple of times. Neither nest was reused a second year; the old tree had fallen over.
They also like bird houses. Over the years, I have had a number of chickadees raise families in my boxes. The preferred size is a wren box with a 1.25-inch entry hole.
Unfortunately, House Wrens take exception to chickadees using their boxes and will evict them. When you clean out your nest boxes in the fall, you will easily see the difference between chickadee and wren nests. Chickadees build a neat, moss-lined nest, very precise and almost fussy. A wren nest is a messy jumble of sticks, as though they barely cared.
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Chickadees are socially monogamous. They form a pair bond, often in the fall or early winter, and stick together throughout the nasty winter weather.
In the spring, they share nest building and they raise their broods together. But when the hormones begin flowing in the spring, fidelity gets washed away. He cheats on her, and she cuckolds him.
Watch the chickadees in mid-April as they race around the bushes, shrubs, and branches. Everybody is trying to get a little on the side and keep someone else from getting a little on the side, and everybody is getting some on the side.
After a long winter staring at the cabin walls, the chickadee sex races are marvelously entertaining, and so accessible. You have got to love them for welcoming spring with such consumptive horniness.
If you take the chickadee as your favorite bird, you can make a good case for your choice.
Edward Howe Forbush, the New England ornithologist, would agree: “The little Black-capped Chickadee is the embodiment of cheerfulness, verve and courage. It can boast no elegant plumes, and it makes no claims as a songster, yet this blithe woodland sprite is a distinctive character, and is a bird masterpiece beyond all praise.”
“Chick-a-dee-dee-dee.” Translated, that means good birding.