Crow Stories Within Stories

The Still Creek Crow Roost is like a nesting doll of crow stories.

It’s an action-packed epic with a cast of thousands — bringing to mind, in scale and scope,  something like Lord of the Rings or Ben Hur (depending on your generational terms of reference.)

But if you stay awhile you start to notice that there’s also a whole lot of When Harry Met Sally and Monty Python going on too!

We took in the show for our Valentine’s Day date night — no reservations necessary — and only a 50/50 chance of getting pooped on. We know how to have a good time!

It was the first time we’d visited the roost for a long time. I’d been worried that it might be too depressing to see a depletion of the roost after all of the development in the area, plus avian flu.

But anyway, for some reason, we felt like being in the company of thousands of crows for Valentine’s, so off we went — and it was as amazing as ever.

When you’re in the middle of the roost, it feels like a whole world of crows. The tide of birds flowing in from all directions feels like one expansive and purposeful being.

It takes a while to get used to the cacophony created by thousands of crows cawing and yelling over each other — although their calls are a minor note amid the roar of rush hour traffic. The sheer kinetic energy generated by thousands of birds moving in large groups can also be a little disorienting at first.

Once your mind adjusts to the volume and scale of it all, you can sometimes focus in on some of the small crow moments going on amid the mayhem.

For example, the little scene in the video below …

 

The yelling second-to-left crow on the street light seems to be a traffic marshal, directing the flow of birds with a continuous series of barked directions.

“Your party is booked in for the Hydro wires tonight, so keep left. Next! OK, your group has reservations for the MacDonald’s roof, so hard right here. Keep moving!!”

Comic relief is provided by another crow and their repeated efforts to land on the steeply curved end of the lamp. I’ve seen this routine many times and in many places — as less experienced crows try to make that tricky technical calculation regarding the camber and surface slipperiness of a typical street light.  It takes a while for the young ones to learn that you can only fit so many crows on these lamps — and the last one to arrive always gets the vexingly convex end of the stick.

A few other moments from date-night at the roost ….

A flurry of last minute indecision — branches or wires for the night’s lodgings?

A bald eagle flies over, white head feathers red-gold in the evening sun.

As the light fades, the crows turn into gauzy ghost birds.

Tricks of the light turn them into even more ethereal looking creatures.

All in all, five stars and no notes as far as Valentine’s Day outing go!

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Note: I see that these previous posts were written on another Valentine’s Day and a New Year’s Eve, so clearly the roost is one of my preferred places to celebrate special occasions!

 

 

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© junehunterimages, 2024. 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

Happy Valentine’s Day

 

If you receive this post in an email, click on the title and go to the website to best view your Valentine video!

 

You may also enjoy, on this day of love and romance:

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© junehunterimages, 2024. 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.

All Season Crows

A month into 2024, and the crows, like the rest of us, have already experienced several seasons.

Vancouver has had “mild and wet” followed by “bloody freezing” and “snowpocalypse” leading, inevitably to “slushmageddon” with, “record-breakingly warm and wet” to round out the month.

We’re all suffering from weather whiplash!

2024 began with pretty standard Wet Coast weather — good conditions for “crows in puddles” photography.

Marvin, Mavis and Lucky (right) debate puddle ownership with Norman and Nancy (January 8)

By mid-month temperatures had plunged to around -13C at night (colder with the wind chill factor) and it was “tuck your feet up into the pantaloons” time for the crows …

… and “wake up at the crack of dawn to check the hummingbird feeder” for me.

After several frigid days the cold snap eased — and the snow started.

It kept on snowing until our neighbourhood was an unrecognizable winter wonderland. The human inhabitants shovelled … and shovelled … and shovelled some more.

Sometimes there was just too much shovelling …

People got around on skis and toboggans and schools were closed for two days in a row. If you didn’t HAVE to get somewhere, it was magical.

“Snow had fallen, snow on snow, snow on snow” — Christina Rossetti

One of my favourite moments was seeing a little girl in a pink snowsuit passionately declaring while throwing herself face-first into the snow, “This is the BEST day of my life!”

Of course, she probably didn’t have to do any shovelling!

My biggest regret: not getting a picture of the night-time unicyclist pedalling through the snow with a plastic toboggan tucked under one arm.

More standard snow commuting options — dig out the car or risk a bike ride.

The crows, unequipped with shovels or sleds, just had to forge their own way through the drifts.

Especially for last year’s fledglings, it must have been confusing to find their normal perches inaccessible. Roofs, railings and branches were suddenly at capacity with snow, making Hydro wires the most reliable landing option.

At least one crow did some of his or her own “digging” to make more room.

A little bit of snow crow semaphore …

Send …………………………………………peanuts ………………………………………… please!

Of course, this being Vancouver, the magic was fleeting and there were more days of slush than there had been of snow.

Slightly confused gull

Lucky in slush

Sparky doing his best in the slush

Vancouver rain acts like a fire hose, and we were soon back to our seasonally normal colour palette of black, white and grey.

Bongo in his damp monochrome world

On the plus side, it’s now back to excellent puddle photography weather!

It’s so mild that it feels … sneakily … unreliably … a bit like spring.

The hellebores are in full bloom!

I haven’t had a chance pick some, place them in a bowl photograph them yet, but I will as soon as it stops raining.

In the meantime, here’s a tiny (literally) sneak peak at a little hellebore- happiness-raven inspired thing I’ve been working on …

 

 

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© junehunterimages, 2024. 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.