Learning The Crowphabet

Words are such tricky things.

Useful, obviously, as how else would I write my blog posts?

I thought so much about them when writing my book, City Crow Stories, around this time last year. The difficulty of finding the right ones; the trickiness of not using too many of them; the peskiness of punctuation.

Very often, I thought about the limitations of words. I was reminded of another of my mother’s favourite sayings …

As I was drifting off to sleep at night, I’d think about how much better a book would be if it was written in untranslated crow.

I imagined a keyboard that could take all of those important crow messages — the ones that are sort of obvious, and yet somehow impossible to put into words — and type them out in clear, unimpeachable prose.

Crow truth in ….

The picture in my mind was not of a computer keyboard but of a manual typewriter, perhaps because my first memories of churning out the written word involve such archaic technology.

When I was about seven my dad (for the dual purposes of entertainment and self-improvement) obtained an old typewriter for me. He was the caretaker for an multi-story Victorian building that housed a bank and various offices. Our family lived on the top floor. In the early, oh-so-mod 60’s, the offices were replacing their outdated typewriters with electric models, so my dad acquired an ancient Underwood for me to save it from the rubbish heap.

This is not the actual typewriter but it was a model very similar to this. I remember my fingers hitting those round keys many thousands of times and the satisfaction of the bell ringing at the end of a row and the tactile pleasure of hitting the return lever.

I spent countless hours typing out “the quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog” and “now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of the party.” I knew, as I practiced over and over, that learning to type was the key to modern communication and I, at seven-and-a-half years old, was right there at the cutting edge.

As you can tell, I am rather old. Playing with my mother’s button tin was also a big treat. I probably had to walk uphill both ways to school, but can’t quite remember …

Anyway, getting back to the typewriter image in my brain … it stayed with me for most of last year until I finally gave in to it and did what I used to do with things that were on my mind when I was a kid — I just drew it out on paper.

Eventually it ended up back on the computer as this image …

Part of my intention for this year was to spend more time on images and less time on words, so the As The Crow Flies image is a sort of resolution in picture form.

There is, I realize, a dollop of ironic humour in my use of writing technology imagery to represent an aspiration to get beyond words. Best just to embrace our limitations, I say.

Another failure to escape the bonds of words and typography:  I needed to create a little chart for myself so that I could make sentences in my newly imagined Crowcabulary. Next thing you know, I’d created the Crowphabet

It’s still a far cry from hearing first hand from crows, but I hope that the poetry of the crow shapes is a small wing flap in the right direction.

Other illustrations in the new gallery of Black and White illustrations include Crow Dance, which you may recognize from my scarf design of the same name.

I’ve also included the Urban Nature illustration that is one of a series of such images I created for the masthead of this very blog.

You can see the new gallery of Black and White crow illustrations in my shop … and feel free to start writing things in “crow” yourself. It makes shopping lists so much more entertaining!

 

 

You may also enjoy:

 

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© junehunterimages, 2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to junehunterimages with appropriate and specific direction to the original content

 

Benjamin Beats The Odds

This is the last in my series of  City Crow Stories updates for now, and concerns Ben, the crow with one very badly bent foot.

The stories I tell about crows are true and, therefore, do not always come with happy endings. For many months I assumed that Benjamin’s story was along the lines of:  “spirited but injured crow tries his hardest to beat the odds and stay alive, but fails in the end.”

I took the photograph of Ben seen below on May 8, 2022. He’d managed to make it through most of the fractious and competitive nesting season, without seeming to have a settled territory of his own. He always seemed to be with several birds so I couldn’t even really tell if he had a mate who had his back, as Mabel did for George.

After the long damp spring came an even longer, hot, dry summer which lasted well into October. Autumn was barely sputtering to a start when she was rear ended by a wildly impatient Winter. All of this happened without a single sighting of Ben.

As I thought about writing my City Crow updates, I envisioned having to share the sad news of both Mabel and Ben’s disappearances.

It was, then, a bit of an early holiday gift to have him just suddenly pop up again. He came surrounded by a rowdy gang of other, able-footed crows and walked right up to me as we’d seen each other only the day before.

The return of Benjamin, December 2022

I did, of course, ask him where he’d been, as is only polite. He answered me in a series of caws that could have been an animated recounting of his epic adventures — or he may just have been asking for peanuts.

I guess we’ll never know …

Benjamin, January 2023

February 2023

The story of Benjamin continues to unfold, with random appearances every few weeks, just to let me know he’s still out there, doing his best.

The stories of ALL the crows are constantly evolving. If I only had the time, I could write a daily post relaying all the small things I notice, the beautiful moments and the never ending puzzle of the crow world. The crows in your neighbourhood are just as fascinating as the seven I wrote about, and I strongly encourage you to tune into your own local crow soap operas.

Thanks so much for following along with these stories and to the many of you who purchased copies of my book. Only four copies remain on my shelf, which is pretty amazing for a book that was self published and un-advertised.

Crows are excellent story tellers, so I think it was a good decision to mostly hand the narrative reins over to them.

 

 

For the rest of the City Crow Stories … A Year On posts:

 

 

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© junehunterimages, 2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to junehunterimages with appropriate and specific direction to the original content

P/Earl & Echo — Perfect For Crow Watching

Sorry — I got a bit behind on what I’d planned to be a daily series of posts about the seven crows in City Crow Stories.

Covid still gets in the way of the best laid plans.

Not to be confused with Corvids, which ARE the best laid plan.

Anyway, the former arrived in our household last week and so my husband is confined to our bedroom while the pets and I sleep at the far end of the house. Bringing him meals, checking in on him via FaceTime (which is very weird) and trying not to get sick myself,  is proving surprisingly time consuming. Luckily he’s not too ill, mostly just tired of looking at the same four walls for days on end.

But I think I have a few minutes, to write about Pearl— who I’m becoming increasingly sure is actually an Earl. Apologies in advance for typos as my copy editor is in quarantine.

Pearl was crow number six of the seven in the book, and s/he, like White Wing, is easy to spot from afar — in his or her case, because of a distinctive bent foot and pigeon-toed stance.

Male or female, I still insist that he’s channelling the same enigmatic confident captured in Vermeer’s “Girl With a Pearl Earring.”

I wrote about Earl and Echo quite recently when I was working on my Crow Watching presentation last fall. They came to mind as particularly great examples of the kinds of crows with distinguishing features that are easier to start keeping track of in your own neighbourhood.

White Wing has her obvious white feather to tell her apart, but she loses it from time to time, and her mate doesn’t have any particularly exceptional features.

Point of Clarification:  I’m certain that Mr. Wing is, in fact, a unique bird — and I’m sure that, to White Wing, he’s one in a million — it’s just that my limited observational skills can’t yet tell him apart from other crows.

Earl has the added bonus (from an ID-ing perspective) of having a mate who also stands out from the crow-d, even from quite a distance.  Echo is blind in one eye and her head is in perpetual motion as she (I’m almost sure she’s the female) uses her hearing to compensate for the vision loss.

If she does detect danger she’s just as fierce as Earl in seeing off the intruders

Earl and Echo, like all crow couples, have each other’s backs …

They take a few quiet moments while Dennis the Menace (profiled in The Young And The Restless) is off having fun with his gang.


Earl is reliably to be found in the same general area each and every day.

Keeping an eye on mountain snow conditions …

Wondering if the snow is every going to stop …

Enjoying a nice paddle when the snow melts …

Promenading with Echo …

I expect to see Earl, Echo and Dennis flying about with twigs soon as nest building season gets underway. It will be time for me to start keeping an extra sharp eye out to see which of them vanishes for 2 to 3 weeks later in spring to incubate the eggs.

Then we’ll know for sure if  we’ve got a Pearl or an Earl.

P/Earl the Enigmatic

 

See also:

For the rest of the City Crow Stories … A Year On posts:

 

 

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© junehunterimages, 2023. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to junehunterimages with appropriate and specific direction to the original content