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Wily Black Crows

12/28/2018

1 Comment

 
Picture
My grandmother fed the crows every afternoon and I can remember their cries of anticipation as she walked out into the field with a pail full of scraps. After my grandmother’s death, it was many years before my mother began feeding her crows. But after she started she often remarked that she heard them say, “Oh here she comes!”  
 
Up until recently I didn’t know why my grandmother and mother had a penchant for crows – I wish I had asked. But my neighbor Rose in Maine has been feeding her crows for ten years, and a month ago when I learned that all of her crows had been shot by hunters on her own land, I was enraged by this injustice. Rose loved her crows; She was devastated.
 
First, I discussed the problem with Raven who was perched in a cottonwood tree outside my door. He listened intently to my plea for help while peering down at me with one beady eye.
 
Normally, I do not have crows around here so ten minutes later when a “murder of crows” appeared screaming over my head as I walked down to the river I knew the raven had passed on the message. I repeated the story to the screeching crows asking that they inform other crows in Rose’s neighborhood that she was in crow mourning. Would they consider asking others to visit her? I took their collective cries as a yes.
 
Returning to the house I was stunned to see another cluster of crows perched in one tree engaged in raucous conversation with at least 4 magpies that had joined them. The raven had been joined by its mate (A bevy of crows, two ravens and four magpies stayed around the house for 3 days).
 
Convinced that I had been heard, and that something would come of it, I immediately emailed Rose telling her not to give up, to keep leaving scraps outside, and to begin to “call” new crows into her yard. She was skeptical, but did as I asked. As a personal thank you I began to leave tasty tidbits for the crows, ravens, magpies around here. 
 
One week later Rose had seven new crows to feed, and as of this writing, crows continue to return! The skeptic will immediately counter the obvious with westernized logic: namely that the crows returned by coincidence, or because at my request, Rose continued to leave food out for them. There’s one major flaw in this thinking: Crows routinely demonstrate to researchers that once one of them has been killed the rest will avoid a favored feeding area for up to two years. “Something” intervened to reverse this normal crow behavior, allowing the crows to return, and I believe it had everything to do with interspecies communication.
 
Armed with the knowledge that birds and animals can communicate telepathically through space/time, I never doubted that help would come. If one understands as I do that telepathy is a biological survival strategy that allows animals to stay in touch when they are separated then it isn’t a stretch to believe that these crows communicated with their Maine relatives. (Please go to biologist/plant physicist/author Rupert Sheldrake’s site to learn more about the extensive research that has been done on telepathy in animals - https://www.sheldrake.org).
 


I think I just heard the cawing of a murder of crows…

Picture
Crows are amazing opportunists who can adapt easily to changing environments. Crows are extremely intelligent and use tools to help them obtain food. Crows not only use tools but they also make them! They are excellent mimics who deliberately confuse other birds by copying their calls. They steal food from other birds and shiny objects from humans including car keys left in an open car, highlighting their deceptive trickster-like nature. Crows are busy bodies paying close attention to what their neighbors are doing, human and otherwise. They can be bullies who mob a sleeping owl during the day. They eat garbage of all kinds, and exhibit loud and raucous behavior. They have big mouths that alert other species in field and forest to the presence of unwanted hunters and others. Crows are also black a color many modern people associate with racism and/or “evil” especially during this ugly cultural reign of “white” supremacy. These qualities of adaptation, intelligence, tool making/using, deception, mimicry, curiosity about others, bullying, ingesting garbage including dead animals/humans, raucous behavior in crowds, the big mouths of certain individuals, and the fact that they are black and equated with evil leaves Corvids suspect and extremely threatening to some. Crows exhibit all kinds of behavior that is human-like and some people despise them for this tendency. Crows reflect the shadow side of today’s culture much like the coyote does.
 
Crows have a very complex family system. Crows mate for life and both parents are actively engaged in parenthood. They care for their young for a period of up to five years with the help of “aunts,” siblings, and older youngsters protecting the youngest birds. Mated pairs form large families of up to 15 individuals that are all related and remain together for many years. American crows do not reach breeding age for at least two years.

The nesting season starts early, with some birds incubating eggs by early April. Crows build bulky stick nests nearly always in trees but sometimes also in large bushes and, very rarely, on the ground. The fledglings are fed all kinds of insects (any crop damage that is blamed on crows is offset by the millions of insects these birds consume). During the nesting period there are guardian crows that watch vigilantly for hawks, eagles and other predators who are a threat to the youngsters. Even with this kind of vigilance fifty percent of the fledglings die before reaching adulthood. The crow’s worst threat is humans, who kill them indiscriminately.
 
These remarkable birds have been able to adapt to virtually every environment on earth with the exception of Antarctica, and are as home in cities as they are in the countryside.
 
Crows honor their dead by gathering together in large numbers to stay with a dead crow for hours before moving quietly away.
 
Crows spend a lot of time studying people with piercing coal black eyes. They recognize the faces of those people who have killed a crow. They communicate this threat to the others in their flock and can also educate the next generation of young who will also avoid the people who would harm them. Crows have more than 20 distinct vocalizations. Some like the “caw” are public but most occur between individuals.
 
Crows will abruptly change migration routes to avoid predation. In most areas in the US the crow is a permanent resident but many Canadian birds will migrate southward during the winter months. Once the mating season is over crows gather in large groups (in some places they gather by the thousands) to roost communally at night.
 
Adult crows are omnivorous, eating insects, mice, frogs, seeds, eggs, fish, corn, wheat, and grains as well as gobbling up destructive insects. During the autumn and winter they gravitate towards nuts and acorns. We know they scavenge at landfills. Their tendency to raid fields of various grains has earned them the name “nuisance” birds giving hunters/farmers an excuse to shoot them when all the crows are doing is trying to earn a living.

Crows have been killed in huge numbers by humans, both for ‘recreation’ and as part of organized campaigns of extermination, none of which have worked to decimate the populations. Like the coyote they continue to thrive!
Crows lifespan in the wild is about 7-8 years but those in captivity can live more than 30 years.
Because they are opportunists and so adaptable crows are one species that is not on the endangered species list. What a relief. My guess is that they will outlast humans.
 
Unlike today’s culture, crows were once respected and revered for the remarkable qualities they exhibited. For example, the Tlingit (Indigenous peoples of the North-West) believe the crow is the main divine character. He organizes the world, and creates both civilization and culture.  

For the Haïda Crow steals the sun to give it to the People. Crow and Raven also have a magic canoe that can become big enough to contain the whole universe.

In the South and Northwest Crow flaps his wings generating wind, thunder and lightning.
 
In European mythology Crow fights evil and has the capacity to break dark spells.
 
As a feminist I am particularly interested in the relationship between crows and old women, both of which have been demonized – old women are frequently called ugly old hags while old men are “distinguished”, and rarely referred to as old. Another example is the phrase “those old crows” which is often used to describe old women. In western culture we worship the young, the “heroic”, fear aging, and split ourselves away from old women and death demonizing both in the process. And yet in mythology we see the power of old women and crows.
 
 For example, Baba Yaga, the greatly feared Slavic death goddess of the Forest lives alone in a house (with her animal familiars) that moves around on chicken legs. Baba Yaga transforms into a crow whenever she chooses. This powerful figure embodies Nature’s wisdom, the wisdom of heart - body instinct; she is also a trickster who is unpredictable in her actions. She is an aspect of woman centered Nature, a protector of all forest wildlife and she has a penchant for all black birds.

The Morrigan, an Irish Celtic goddess is most well-known for being a goddess of Fate and a warrior; she was able to predict death which made her presence terrifying. Most commonly she shape - shifted into a crow, although she could take the form of any animal she chose. One of her names, Badbh, means Crow.

Again and again in the stories about old women and crows we see the same pattern emerging. These much feared death goddesses are both manifestations of death and are the harbingers of new life. Without old women “crows” there would be no rebirth.

When I think of my mother and grandmother feeding the Corvids it occurs to me that these two were participating in the life death life cycle of Nature… As I put together an offering for the crows and walk out my door I carry the awareness that like my mother and grandmother before me, I too am now participating in the Great Round, serving the continuation of Life For All.

I end this essay with a caveat: to mindlessly slaughter crows is to incur the wrath of Nature; She is more than capable of retaliation for harm done as we are starting to see with the ravages of Climate Change…

It is well known that the number 3 was held sacred to the ancient people, and so often she is depicted as three sisters, representing the three different aspects of the Goddess as mentioned above, but also perhaps the maiden, the mother and the crone. In that case, the term ‘the Morrigan’ is likely a title or epithet which could be applied to the threesome collectively.

1 Comment
ROGER J. CAOUETTE
12/28/2018 01:55:01 pm

HI SARA. A GREATLY APPRCIATED HISTORY.
CROWS HAVE BEEN ON MY MIND A LOT FOR THE PAST FEW YEARS. THEY ARE MAGICAL AND PESKY BUT ALL BIRDS HAVE A SPECIAL PLACE IN MY WORLD VISION.'
I LIVE IN CAPE ELIZABETH , MAINE AND HAVE WATCHED THE CROW POPULATION EXPLODE HERE FOR THE PAST 15 YEARS OR SO, BUT THIS YEAR...ALL BUT ONE OR TWO ARE GONE. NO EXAGGERATION . WE TOOK A 4 MILE WALK YESTERDAY DOWN A FAMILIAR COUNTRY ROAD AND SAW 3 TOTAL. I AM WAITING ON THE EXTENSION SERVICE AND A LOCAL BOTANIST TO GET BACK TO ME... I AM STYMIED. HAVE YOU HEARD ANYTHING FROM YOUR FRIENDS IN MAINE? THANKS. WE ARE LONG TIME ADMIRERS OF NEW MEXICO. SILVER CITY, SANTE FE AND TAOS ARE OUR FAVORITES , ALTHOUGH THERE ARE MANY OTHER TOWNS AND VILLAGES THAT WE HAVE LOVED.. THEN OF COURSE THERE IS CHACO CANYON. HOPE YOU HAVE A GOOD YEAR. BEST WISHES. ROGER

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