Sometime before 1968 Jack spotted a
Common Grackle in his back yard and wrote about his find in his Los Angeles
Times column. Although the Great-tailed Grackle was known to range into
California, the Common Grackle was not. So, Jack's siting was a first.
Members of the
Los Angeles Audubon Society challenged him and
claimed that he couldn't possibly have seen a Common Grackle in the backyard of
his Mt. Washington home. This ongoing dispute was referred to in many of
Jack's columns over the years. Some of those columns are reproduced below.
In February of 1976, the
Los Angeles Audubon Society presented
Jack with a pen & ink drawing of the "mythical" California Common
Grackle - Quiscalus quiscula smith drawn by Mary Ellen Pereyra.
The inscription on the back of the drawing reads "Presented to Mr. Jack
Smith, With affection and amusement. Los Angeles Audubon Society, 12
February 1976." It is this drawing that we have adopted as the
logo of the Jack & Denny Smith Memorial Fund for Literacy.
Wednesday, March
18, 1987
Jack Smith
Not To Beat A Dead Grackle, But Is A Bird In Long Island Worth Two In
Mt. Washington's Bush?
View, Page 5-1
By Jack Smith,
In a recent Page 1
story the New York Times expressed its amazement that an Azur gallinule
had been found on Long Island, albeit dead.
The Azur
gallinule, the Times noted, had never before been seen in flight north
of Venezuela.
As the Times put
it, "What was the Azur gallinule doing in Angela Wright's backyard?"
A measure of the
story's importance, in the eyes of the Times, was its presence on the
front page along with stories about the National Security Council's
undercover operations in the Iranian arms affair, a Wall Street takeover
whiz kid's plea of guilty to illegal insider trading, cannibalism among
Vietnamese boatpeople, and more gunfire in Beirut.
The Times
described the gallinule as "an ungainly bird," though a photograph of
one in life showed it to be rather pleasant-looking, if somewhat plump,
not unlike a coot or a rail in conformation; and in flight, I imagine,
it might be quite beautiful. One should not casually dismiss any bird as
ungainly.
Another measure of
the story's importance is that Mrs. Wright found the bird in her yard at
Fort Salona, L.I., last December, yet it is still regarded as Page 1
news. She put the bird in a plastic sack and placed it in her
refrigerator, and only recently did the news get out to the
ornithological world.
"Word of the find,
which might be the first sighting of the species in North America, has
spread beyond this quiet North Shore community," the Times said.
There are some
unanswered questions.
First, of course,
is how did the bird get there? And how did it die?
Suspicion first
fell on Mrs. Wright's cat, a calico nicknamed Killer Cat, which Mrs.
Wright admitted "pounces on everything that moves."
However, she is
sure the cat did not kill the gallinule. The bird was in perfect
condition, showing no signs of tooth and claw.
"It looked too
good to be dead," Mrs. Wright said candidly.
The bird's
condition gave weight to the theory that it had flown 2,500 miles from
its Amazonian habitat, and perhaps perished in the harsh Long Island
winter.
Gallinule , by the
way, is derived from gallinula , diminutive of the Latin gallina; it
means little hen.
Naturally, all the
region's ornithologists and bird watchers are terribly excited by the
appearance of this rare find, and have undoubtedly beaten a path to Mrs.
Wright's door.
How different from
the skeptical indifference that followed my own sighting, several years
ago, of the only common grackle that had ever been seen west of the
Mississippi River. He flew over our birdbath while I was out on the
patio writing a column about spring.
Though I mentioned
this event in the column, not then realizing its importance, the Los
Angeles Times took no notice of it in its news pages. But bird watchers
are an alert group, and the story spread.
Among dozens of
other letters, I received one from the Audubon Society apprising me of
the fact that no grackle had ever been seen west of the Mississippi
River, and that I must be mistaken in my identification. I took this to
be a shockingly unscientific position for the society to hold. The true
scientist does not rule out any phenomenon until he has checked it out.
If indeed there
were grackles on the other side of the Mississippi, I pointed out, what
was to keep one from flying across it and coming on out to Los Angeles.
My argument was
met with aloof disinterest, until several months later, when I saw
another grackle--like the first one, in my backyard.
That galvanized
them. They made me an honorary member of the society, invited me to be
guest of honor at their annual banquet and named a bird walk for me at
Descanso Gardens.
The moral
obviously is that the Audubon Society is much more likely to believe two
grackles than they are one.
This is only
reasonable, since grackles, like other birds, are sexual animals, and it
isn't likely that a grackle would fly all the way out here from
Kentucky, or wherever they live, without its mate.
How the grackle
got into my backyard is easy enough to explain. It got there like Mrs.
Wright's Azur gallinule got into her backyard. It flew there.
Since then, by the
way, I have seen a Steller's jay, an orchard oriole, a rufous
hummingbird, a Lichtenstein's oriole and a peacock--all birds that have
no business being in my backyard.
There are people
who think that my backyard lies in the path of some natural
phenomenon--perhaps a magnetic field--that causes birds to seek it out,
far from their usual paths.
It wasn't long
after my second grackle that a broad-billed hummingbird turned up at the
Trimmer house, just over the top of the hill from ours. Now the
broad-billed hummingbird, like the grackle, had never before been seen
in Los Angeles. Mrs. Trimmer alerted the Audubon Society through its hot
line, and before long dozens of birders were trooping to her doorstep.
The hummer hung around for two or three days, coming every 20 minutes to
feed, and Mrs. Trimmer became a celebrity.
It has always
seemed odd to me that no such excitement attended my sighting of the
grackle. I'm not bitter about it. After all, I have my bird walk.
But I wish I'd put
that grackle in a plastic sack and stuck him in our refrigerator.
Then maybe I'd
have some respect.
Thursday December
17, 1987
Jack Smith
A
Tradition That's Not Just for the Birds
View, Page 5-1
By Jack Smith,
Last Sunday was
the day of the 19th annual Denny and Jack Smith Bird Walk at Descanso
Gardens, up in La Canada.
In the beginning,
it was known as the Jack Smith Bird Walk. In time, perhaps because my
wife always shared the hardship of going up into the foothills at 8
o'clock in the morning on the second Sunday of December, it became known
as the Jack and Denny Smith Bird Walk. Eventually, her name led mine.
How that came about I don't know. Perhaps it's a sign of the times.
When we got up
Sunday morning the wind was blowing fiercely. I looked out the kitchen
door and saw that all our deck chairs had blown over. The umbrella table
had blown out of its heavy steel base and traveled across the lawn. Its
plastic top was cracked from side to side.
The damage was
heavy on our hill. Broken trees, fallen branches, trash barrels blown
over. There was hardly any traffic. On Linda Vista Avenue in Pasadena we
saw only two or three cars and a band of hardy women jogging.
The wind was icy.
"There won't be anybody there," I said. "There probably won't even be
any birds."
We were two or
three minutes late. About 60 birders were gathered outside the gate
around Warren Peterson, our leader. They were all bundled up in
foul-weather gear. They looked cold but hardy.
"They have to be
crazy," I said.
Peterson said that
because of the wind damage the park was closed. He was waiting for the
supervisor to OK the walk. I was amazed to see so many regulars. Over
the years many of their names and faces have become familiar. They are
tough, cheerful and friendly.
The routine is
simple. We all set out in a ragged troop behind our leader. Some carry
binoculars and cameras, some telescopes on tripods. Some just tag along,
probably thinking about hot coffee and breakfast.
Anyone who sees a
bird calls out its name. Our leader sees most of them first. I usually
fall behind, renewing my acquaintance with old-timers. When the walk is
over I am amazed to hear that we have sighted 30 birds, or whatever. I
almost never see any birds at all.
We had hardly set
out last Sunday, after getting the OK, when an enormous bird swooped
directly across the road in front of us. "Great horned owl," our leader
shouted.
That was as
auspicious a beginning as we had ever had. I was talking to a woman in a
Windbreaker and woolen pants and a Scottish cap when someone sighted an
Audubon's warbler. Everyone looked up into the tree in which the warbler
had been seen. I saw nothing but leaves.
Of course I no
longer have to prove myself. The bird walk was instituted back in 1968
by the San Fernando Valley Audubon Society in honor of my sighting of
the first common grackle ever seen in Southern California. None has ever
been seen since.
"I think I hear a
kingfisher," a woman told me confidentially.
"What do they
sound like?" I asked.
She said, "They go
ech-ech-ech-ech." I heard nothing but the wind crashing through the oak
trees. Hundreds of acorns were scattered on the ground. A man picked one
up and sliced it in two and exposed the yellow meat, along with a fat
pale worm. The worm had burrowed into the acorn and was living in there
in the dark, eating himself to death. Why would the Creator waste his
genius on such a creature?
We walked up to
the observation house overlooking the lake. I stayed outside in a patch
of sun with several other stragglers. We could hear the ducks. I
wondered how they could stand it, being in the water on a day like this.
"Great blue heron!" someone cried. So the heron was back. What a
showboat. He turned up almost every year.
I climbed up to
the fence around the lake and looked across it to where the heron was
standing in some bamboo trees. He was preening himself. Obviously he
enjoyed the attention. I also saw some ducks and I might have seen a
grebe.
When our leader
dismissed us he said we had sighted 26 birds. I had sighted only two and
some ducks.
I'll be back next
year, though. You never know when you're going to see a snowy egret.
Tuesday January
16, 1990
JACK SMITH
How Many Grackles Does It Take to Be an Expert?
View, Page E-1
By JACK SMITH,
Because I happened
to see a common grackle in my back yard several years ago--the only
grackle ever sighted in Southern California, or, for that matter,
anywhere west of the Mississippi River--I have been regarded ever since
as something of a bird expert.
Like most
reputations, this one is quite fraudulent, but also, like most, whether
good or bad, it is impossible to get rid of. Because of that one
fortuitous sighting, my knowledge of birds has been falsely regarded as
profound, if not mystical.
Consequently, I
receive numerous letters from readers asking me questions about birds
they encounter in their back yards. Only the other day I received one
from Mrs. Gerd Abegglen, of Downey, who said she has an Audubon warbler
that drinks from her hummingbird feeder, and she wonders whether this
behavior is unusual for a warbler.
I haven't the
slightest idea about the behavior of warblers, but I suspect that
nothing a warbler or any other bird does is unusual. Birds are creatures
of instinct, and they don't do unusual things.
Mrs. Abegglen also
said she has a pair of large black birds that eat her bread, first
taking it to the birdbath to soften it up. She thinks they are ravens,
but she isn't sure they aren't crows. She asks "How do you tell the
difference?"
The only way I
know to tell a crow from a raven for sure is that ravens quoth
"Nevermore."
I recently
received an inquiry from G. M. Bryant, of Yucca Valley, asking about his
road runners. Bryant said he had been feeding two road runners that
seemed very tame, but suddenly they disappeared. He wondered if I could
tell him why.
Wisely, I sent his
letter on to my friend, Henry E. Childs, the birdman of Upland, retired
professor of ornithology at Chaffey College and an ornithologist of
note. (It was Childs who debunked the myth that the swallows return to
San Juan Capistrano every March 19.)
Childs not only
was able to reassure Bryant that his road runners' departure is only
seasonal and that they will return, but also provided him with a number
of curious facts about this bird.
He noted that road
runners are members of the cuckoo family, but unlike the notorious
European cuckoo, they do not lay their eggs in other birds' nests to be
hatched. (This nefarious bird sometimes kicks some of its victims' own
eggs out of her nest, so she will not notice the greater number and be
suspicious.)
Childs also said
that male road runners do most of the incubating at night. "(Males)
maintain their regular body temperature while the females goof off and
lower their body temperature sharply, a remarkable sexual difference
which I didn't know but which I learned because your letter got me into
the literature."
Childs is not
infallible, though. He disagrees with my argument that our scrub jay,
the bird so many of us here have in our back yards, should be called a
blue jay, since it is (1) blue, and (2) a jay. Childs says the blue jay
is an altogether different bird, which just shows that you can know too
much.
We here in Los
Angeles have a great many more birds than most people are aware of.
Recently, Kimball L. Garrett, ornithology collections manager of the
Natural History Museum, said that 108 different species have been seen
around Exposition Park and 445 have been seen in Southern California.
Garrett, by the way, gave credence to my grackle sighting by observing
that "over time, if enough people are looking, you can find everything."
One result of my
sighting is that the bird walk at Descanso Gardens is named the Jack and
Denise Smith Birdwalk, after me and my wife, on the second Sunday of
every December. As usual, we attended last December; but I tend to get
more involved in conversation with other birders than with actually
watching for birds.
Consequently, I
was astonished when Karen Johnson, our leader, announced that we had
sighted no fewer than 44 species on our two-hour walk, among them the
green-backed heron, the yellow-rumped warbler, the rufous-sided towhee,
the belted kingfisher and the lesser goldfinch.
Funny. The only
ones I actually saw were a sparrow, a scrub jay, a crow, a mourning dove
and a duck.
Monday October 1,
1990
JACK
SMITH
Questioning Expertise Of Sightings May Be For The Birds
View, Page E-1
By JACK SMITH,
My fellow birder
Henry E. Childs Jr., the birdman of Upland, has published a book, "Where
Birders Go in Southern California" (Los Angeles Audubon Society) that
should be useful to birders who don't know where to go to see birds.
Of course there
are 350 species of birds in Southern California (500 if you really look
hard), and one can see many without seeking out the best habitats. We
even have ravens among the skyscrapers in downtown Los Angeles.
Dr. Childs has a
doctorate in zoology from UC Berkeley, and is emeritus professor of
biology at Chaffey College in Alta Loma. He has been a birder for nearly
55 years.
Dr. Childs and I
are friends, despite one or two collisions caused by our different
degrees of erudition. I concede that Dr. Childs in an authority, whereas
I am just an amateur. Nevertheless, I stand my ground on certain points.
Dr. Childs, for
one thing, has always been skeptical of my report of sighting a common
grackle in my back yard on Mt. Washington. It is true that after I
published that report I was informed by the Audubon Society that no
grackle had ever been sighted west of the Mississippi River (as I
recalled just the other day). I observed that if indeed there were
grackles on the other side of the Mississippi, what was to keep one from
flying across it and coming on out to Los Angeles? The society was not
persuaded.
In the copy of his
book that Dr. Childs sent to me he has marked the great- tailed grackle
in the index, noting that it can be sighted in Imperial, Inyo and San
Bernardino counties. That is his only concession; but of course it is
meaningless since the great- or boat-tailed grackle is another animal
altogether.
Dr. Childs does
note, in his listing of birding locations in the Pasadena area, that
Descanso Gardens, in La Canada Flintridge, is the "site of the famous
Jack Smith Bird Walk in December. (The second Sunday of December, at 8
a.m.)" He might have noted that the birdwalk was named after me as a
direct result of my grackle sighting. (By the way, the bird walk is now
known as the Jack and Denise Smith Bird Walk, since my wife has never
failed to accompany me on that arduous outing.)
He lists both blue
jays and scrub jays, without reference to my insistence that the scrub
jay is blue, and it is undoubtedly a jay, so by rights it should be
called a blue jay. Dr. Childs and I have contested this point several
times in public, but of course, because of his greater academic
standing, he usually prevails.
I am most
surprised that I do not find San Juan Capistrano in the index. For
years, as you know, San Juan Capistrano has celebrated the return of the
swallows on March 19. This annual migration has become an epic event
that attracts thousands of curious visitors to the mission city.
Dr. Childs can
hardly conceal his frustration over civic exploitation of what he
considers a fraud. The migrations of swallows take place over several
weeks, he maintains, and thousands of them are back in their old haunts
well before March 19. He is not, however, as successful in exorcising
this myth as he has been in preserving the name scrub jay.
Dr. Childs lists
several good birding locations in the central Los Angeles area, showing
that you don't need to go to rural areas to find birds. In Olvera
Street, for example, one may see feral ringed turtle-doves in the olive
trees near the north end; chimney swifts may be seen at Forest Lawn
Hollywood at dusk in summer; the Huntington Library and Botanical
Gardens harbors such species as the red-whiskered bulbul, orioles,
tanagers, warblers, flycatchers and sparrows.
(By the way,
birders are advised to carry a standard field guide when visiting the
locations listed by Dr. Childs, since his bird list is not alphabetized,
and birds are grouped under family names, which are Greek to most of
us.)
I hope my petty
complaints will not keep birders from obtaining this book. Dr. Childs
gives some good tips on birding. "Wear dark clothing, including your
hat. Birds have the best color vision of any living creatures. They see
or hear you and take evasive action before you see them . . . Be
stealthy, quiet. Avoid thrashing about. The quiet observer sees more . .
. Stay on established pathways. Damage to the habitat affects all
species in the ecosystem.
"When possible,"
he concludes, "prior to reporting a rare or unusual sighting, have
another birder of better or equal ability locate and verify your
identification."
I don't know
whether Dr. Childs wrote that with my grackle sighting in mind, but I
could hardly have had the sighting verified by another birder of better
or equal ability. The only other person around was my wife, and she
doesn't know a grackle from a black-headed grosbeak.
Neither do I, for
that matter.
Monday December
18, 1995
JACK SMITH
A
Bevy Of Birds, But Still No Grackle
Life & Style, Page
E-1
By JACK SMITH,
Once again my wife
and I were invited to attend the Jack and Denny Smith Bird Walk at
Descanso Gardens and, on a recent Sunday morning, we went. The
invitation came from Karen Johnson, first vice president of the San
Fernando Valley Audubon Society and indefatigable leader of the walk.
The Society's
publication, Phainopepla, graciously noted that the walk has been held
for several years to honor me for my "unprecedented sighting of a common
grackle at the Smith residence on Mt. Washington (the Smiths were the
recipients of San Fernando Valley's Special Award in 1993)."
Though I have
never actively sought recognition for my sighting, which has been the
object of much skepticism by ornithologists and common birders, it was
gratifying to see my coup acknowledged by such a prestigious
publication.
It was a beautiful
day at Descanso Gardens. The bird walk started at 8 o'clock with about
30 of us in attendance. Johnson welcomed us and introduced my wife and
me. For the first time, I went in a wheelchair, with my wife pushing.
As usual, the walk
began with numerous sightings. Johnson noted a flock of yellow-rumped
warblers. As often happens to me on bird walks, I didn't see them.
Someone also reported seeing a flock of acorn woodpeckers that also
escaped my notice. "See them moving frantically from place to place,"
Johnson called out. "They're eating insects."
I don't know
whether my eyesight is deteriorating or whether I just happened to be
looking at the wrong place at the wrong time, but I missed several of
the sightings that later turned up on our list. Perhaps I was distracted
by looking for another grackle.
"There's a
hummingbird hovering at 12 o'clock," Johnson said. But I didn't know
whether she meant 12 o'clock high or 12 o'clock low, and I missed it.
Later she
identified a "flock of about 200 cedar waxwings." It was cedar waxwings,
my wife reminded me, that used to get drunk off the nectar of a
cotoneaster bush near a corner of our house. They used to really get
soused and flop around drunkenly. It was delightful. Somehow a drunken
bird is not disgusting.
"Whatever happened
to them?" I asked my wife.
"We cut down the
cotoneaster when we remodeled. To build your office. Remember?"
All things
considered, I don't think the trade was worth it.
We soon came to
the pond. For years this has been a refuge for many water birds,
including the resident great blue heron. Sure enough Johnson cried out,
"There he is! The great blue heron! He's perching on that branch."
I looked in vain
for the great blue heron, which I had seen in previous years. But I did
see a remarkable bird--a long-necked swanlike creature with a red beak.
It sailed about majestically.
"That's the
Australian black swan," Johnson said, and I felt better about having
missed the great blue heron.
A moment later
Johnson identified another remarkable bird--the green heron, not as big
as the great blue heron but greener.
I identified a
bird that I thought might be the great blue heron, but Johnson said
"It's not blue, it's white. It's a goose."
Which is what I
felt like.
The gardens were
lush with greenery. Sycamores, live oaks, pines. A ginkgo spread an
umbrella of yellow leaves and laid a carpet of them on the ground.
At one point the
trail was rather steep, and I could tell my wife was winded. "Can I
help?" said a male voice with a heavy British accent. He was a lean
young man with a large walrus mustache. He took the wheelchair and
pushed me up the hill. He said he was a Yorkshireman, name of Alan Dunn.
We came finally to
the "counting bridge," which is where we stop to list all the birds we
have seen. The birders began calling out the names and Johnson checked
them off on a list.
It was a
remarkable count. Wood duck, mallard, ring-necked duck, American coot,
California gull, mourning dove, white-throated swift, Anna's
hummingbird, Allen's hummingbird, belted kingfisher, acorn woodpecker,
Nutall's woodpecker, northern flicker, black phoebe, scrub jay, American
crow, common raven, plain titmouse, bushtit, Bewick's wren, ruby-crowned
kinglet, hermit thrush, American robin, wrentit, northern mockingbird,
California thrasher, cedar waxwing.
I wonder why there
were so many birds on the list that I didn't see. As I said, maybe it
was because I was concentrating so hard on the grackle. I wonder also
whether I might hope that in time the bird would come to be known's as
Smith's grackle. It makes as much sense as Anna's hummingbird and
Nutall's woodpecker.
After all "common"
grackle is much too common for a bird that scarce.
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