Or rather all corvids. They have been among my favorites wherever I lived. Konrad Lorenz and Bernd Heinrich did not have to plant the seed to this love, but they did nurture it in me through books and personal encounters.
Twice,
as a child and young adult in Germany, I was lucky enough to become the
keeper of a tame Jackdaw, which is the smallest of the black European
corvids. Each was a free flying companion for many years. Their
intelligence and curiosity got them into many comical or even dangerous
adventures - hiking or biking with Jackdaw never got boring.
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Hooded Crows in Trondheim |
When I lived in Trondheim, Norway, Crows became my
favorites. Resident researchers soon invited me to climb huge pine
trees to get to the nests of rooks to get blood samples of the nestlings
- I did not particularly like that idea. But I could watch for hours
the behavior of those stately Hooded Crows that stood up to the biggest,
loudest Hering Gulls with dignity.
In Florida, the Blue Jays came to my balcony. Their antics helped through some inevitable homesickness. When I moved on half a year later, I sure missed those guys!
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Morning has Broken |
Their large cosmopolitan relative, the Common Raven,
is the most intelligent and impressive. I love watching our resident
pair here in the Arizona Desert. In Summer, they let the vortex of a thunderhead cloud carry them up into
the sky, only to swoop down with breathtaking speed and start it all
over again. An amazing spectacle!
This is a great post!
ReplyDeleteWhere you fortunate enough to meet Konrad? When I was 12 I was sent to Germany as a private exchange student. I spent six months with Gustav Kramer and family in Wilhelmshaven. They had a very tame raven at that time.... and then I went on for six months with the Lorenz family. the institute was being built but Konrad and Family were still in crowed quarters in Dulmen. I was so fortunate!
ReplyDeleteI met him, but only in university settings - he still gave presentations when he was already quite old. I envy your experience. Living in that household must have been fabulous for a child! I actually did not know that they lived in Duelmen. Was that Duelmen in NRW? In the early seventies I did some volunteer work with an ethologist who was working with the wild horses there. Small world!
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