Listening to a Continent Sing: Birdsong by Bicycle from the Atlantic to the Pacific

Listening to a Continent Sing: Birdsong by Bicycle from the Atlantic to the Pacific

by Donald Kroodsma
Listening to a Continent Sing: Birdsong by Bicycle from the Atlantic to the Pacific

Listening to a Continent Sing: Birdsong by Bicycle from the Atlantic to the Pacific

by Donald Kroodsma

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Overview

A birdsong expert's poignant and beautifully illustrated memoir of a bicycle journey across America with his son

Join birdsong expert Donald Kroodsma on a ten-week, ten-state bicycle journey as he travels with his son from the Atlantic to the Pacific, lingering and listening to our continent sing as no one has before. On remote country roads, over terrain vast and spectacular, from dawn to dusk and sometimes through the night, you will gain a deep appreciation for the natural symphony of birdsong many of us take for granted. Come along and marvel at how expressive these creatures are as Kroodsma leads you west across nearly five thousand miles—at a leisurely pace that enables a deep listen.

Listening to a Continent Sing is also a guided tour through the history of a young nation and the geology of an ancient landscape, and an invitation to set aside the bustle of everyday life to follow one's dreams. It is a celebration of flowers and trees, rocks and rivers, mountains and prairies, clouds and sky, headwinds and calm, and of local voices and the people you will meet along the way. It is also the story of a father and son deepening their bond as they travel the slow road together from coast to coast.

Beautifully illustrated throughout with drawings of birds and scenes and featuring QR codes that link to audio birdsong, this poignant and insightful book takes you on a travel adventure unlike any other—accompanied on every leg of your journey by birdsong.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781400880324
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 05/03/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 321,605
File size: 30 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Donald Kroodsma is professor emeritus of ornithology at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a world-renowned authority on birdsong.

Read an Excerpt

Listening to a Continent Sing

Birdsong by Bicycle from the Atlantic to the Pacific


By Donald Kroodsma

PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS

Copyright © 2016 Donald Kroodsma
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4008-8032-4



CHAPTER 1

BEGINNINGS


DAY 1, MAY 4: YORKTOWN TO JAMESTOWN, VIRGINIA

Rain. Why, when we are about to embark on the journey of a lifetime, why must it rain? Restless, anxious, hoping for a break, I've done my best to enjoy the soothing patter on the tent's fly over the last few hours, but now it's nearly 5 a.m. and time to get moving. The muffled words I catch from deep in David's sleeping bag are "... rain ... sleep more ... won't miss anything...."

Reluctantly, I accept. So much for nearly two years of my planning and imagining a Grand Beginning to this Journey, at the towering Monument with birds singing through sunrise.

From the comfort of our sleeping bags, Plan B comes all too easily, but for me sleep does not. I lie alert, thinking through the preparations for the trip and wondering what I am doing here. Over four thousand miles of biking lie ahead, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, with all kinds of challenging terrain and weather. I had better get used to Plan B, I lecture myself, for who knows what we'll encounter in the coming weeks and months.

A robin begins to sing, 5:34 a.m. according to my watch, about half an hour before sunrise. His low, sweet carols drop from above one by one, cheerily, cheer-up, cheerio, cheerily, and I am soon silently singing with him, three to five carols over a few seconds, then a brief pause, then a few more carols, and another pause. I feel his tempo, counting the number of carols in the next package and pausing, counting and pausing, his initial measured pace calming. I try to stretch each quarter-second carol into a second or more, slowing his performance, relishing the varying patterns in pitch and rhythm, listening and watching as miniature musical scores float through my mind. He accelerates now, adding a single high screechy note, a hisselly, after each caroled series, but soon there will be two or more such high, exclamatory notes. I know how to listen to the patterns in his singing, how he combines sequences of different caroled and hisselly notes to express all that is on his mind, sometimes even singing the two contrasting notes simultaneously with a low carol from his left voice box and a high hisselly from his right, but for now the effort of deep listening is too much like work. Instead, I curl up in the sleeping bag, drifting along on a robin's song, floating, a broad smile creeping over my face, this robin having reminded me why I'm here.


American robin.

Low carols followed by a high hisselly. (1, 2:00) See p. vii for how to listen.

A wood thrush joins in. He awakes with sharp whit whit calls, as if a bit peeved, then gradually calms to softer bup bup notes, and soon he's in full song, so rich and melodious, the stuff of boundless superlatives, one of the wonders of eastern woodlands. I sing with him, too, acknowledging the soft bup bup bup notes at the beginning of each song, then gather in the low, rich, flute-like, ee-oh-lay prelude, then smile at what sounds to my human ears like a harsh and percussive terminal flourish. At first I simply dissect each song into its prelude and flourish, marking the contrast between the two, but I'm soon sketching each prelude in my mind as he sings. Emerging are five different half-second masterpieces of rising and falling, rich, pure notes, delivered just slowly enough that I can detect the overall patterns. And the flourishes — what a pity that I cannot slow them down now and hear the pure magic in the way the thrush must hear it, with his precision breathing through his two voice boxes producing the most extraordinary harmonies imaginable.


Wood thrush.

Five different ee-oh-lay phrases in the rain-songs of this Virginia maestro. (2, 2:02)

In my mind's eye, I see a grand evolutionary tree, the massive trunk emerging from the primordial soup, the branches and twigs sufficient to accommodate every lineage and every living creature that ever was and is. At the very tips of three twigs in this grand array are the robin, the thrush, and me. Trace each of our lineages back in recent time and we each find two parents, four grandparents, then eight great-grandparents, and so on. Climbing down this tree, some tens of millions of years back in time the robin and thrush meet at a branching point where they have the same ancestor, where they are one. The robin and thrush now travel back in time together in search of their roots, meeting up with me some hundreds of millions of years ago, when we all had the same ancestor, when we were one. We belong to an extended family, each of us an extraordinary success story, each of us with an unbroken string of successful ancestors dating back to the beginning of time. The robin, the thrush, and I are equals: "Mitakuye oyasin," the Sioux would say as they end a prayer, "all my relations."

A chickadee sings now, too, a Carolina chickadee. Song after whistled song pierces the air, each sharp and sure. He sings the common high-low-high-low pattern, fee-bee-fee-bay, four whistles alternating from high to low frequency. But then he's on to another pattern, this one high-low-low-high, as in fee-bee-bee-fee; and soon he sings fee-bee-bay-fee-bee, three different song patterns, now leaping excitedly among them, successive songs always different. What frenzied singing, as if he's eager to show off all that he knows, eager in this pre-sunrise chorus to challenge other males and to impress listening females that he's the one. How different from what I can expect in an hour or so, when he'll repeat one of his songs many times before switching to another, perhaps well after attentive females have made their mating decisions. I listen for a neighboring male chickadee, hoping to hear a dialogue between them, but hear none.


Carolina chickadee.

Excitedly singing a variety of songs, interspersed with calls. (3, 2:02)

But I do hear a conversation among the tufted titmice. The nearby male sings peter peter peter, and two other males in the distance, each on his own territory, echo with the identical song, songs that they've learned from each other. Back and forth and around they go as they answer each other; I note the time, 5:51 a.m., knowing that this peter peter discussion could go on for a while, as each male can sing 500 or more renditions of a particular song before they all switch, almost in unison, to a different song in their repertoires.


Tufted titmice.

Neighboring males dueling with identical songs. (4, 1:21)

The robin, the wood thrush, the chickadee, the titmice ... Yes, I know why I'm here, and I'm not even out of the sleeping bag on the first day. Disjointed thoughts surface with jumbled words that do no justice to the certainty of purpose ... to celebrate life, David's and mine, and the lives of other creatures along the way ... to hear this continent sing, not only the birds but also the people, flowers and trees, rocks and rivers, mountains and prairies, clouds and sky, all that is ... to discover America all over again, from the seat of a bicycle ... to embrace reality, leaving behind the insanity of a workplace gone amuck ... to simply be, to strip life to its bare essentials and discover what emerges ... and in the process, perhaps find my future ... by listening to birds!

The rain having abated, David stirs, and we agree it's time to get going. "Best not to get up before the sun," David offers as he squeezes out of the tent. I sense something rather profound in that statement, something about awaking after the birds' finest hour. What opposites we are, as I cherish dawn and he dusk, our preferred waking hours a half day out of sync. We should address this issue head-on, but I choose to just smile and wonder quietly how this will play out over the coming weeks.

We dress for the cool, wet weather, staying dry and warm in our bright yellow rain gear. Sleeping bags are soon stuffed into their sacks, sleeping pads rolled and tied, the wet tent collapsed and stuffed into its sack. David warms water over his homemade soda-can stove, and we refuel on a breakfast of oatmeal loaded with brown sugar and raisins, mixed with powdered milk for extra protein. Continuing what will be the routine for the next two to three months, we rinse dishes and utensils, return miscellaneous items to their places in the panniers, fill the water bottles, and load the panniers onto the bikes, strapping sleeping bags and pads and tent to the bikes' racks. Somewhat mystified at this point, I stare at the loaded bikes, such a pretty sight, astonished that all of the gear we had spread out last night is now neatly tucked away, ready to ride.

"Ready?" "Yep!" After zeroing our odometers for the day, we set out through the campground and then onto an unmarked trail into the nearby woods. We do our best to follow the directions of a park attendant, but are rather uncertain in these first minutes of our journey how this path will lead us to Yorktown's Victory Monument, from where our maps will guide us to the Pacific Ocean.

Though we may be uncertain of the trails, I know what I'm hearing: It is springtime in Virginia and migrants abound, many of them probably having arrived overnight. The treetops are alive with every male bird trying his best to impress. "David, listen to all this! There are robins and Baltimore orioles and scarlet tanagers and wood thrushes and great crested flycatchers and Carolina chickadees and tufted titmice and brown-headed cowbirds and song sparrows and red-eyed vireos ... and warblers ... blue-winged and black-throated green and prairie and yellow and chestnut-sided warblers, northern parulas, just for starters, and many of them have plastic, wavering songs, showing that they're still learning them."

David smiles, nods. Too much, he seems to be saying, but maybe in the coming weeks he'll also come to love birds for all they have to say. Or perhaps he's wondering how he can turn his interest in carbon cycles and climate science into a lifetime of exploration, much as I've done with birdsong. I've heard him say "It's a chance to get to know my father better ... but we could have chosen a more adventurous trip than one that's all mapped out from coast to coast." I relish time with him, too, but I look at the road ahead as uncharted, as fresh and unexplored, for we will be listening to the world pass by in ways that no one else ever has.

Heading generally northeast along woodland trails and secondary roads, we enter a clearing where, a sign informs us, George Washington had his headquarters during late 1781. The American army was camped just to the east, our allies the French to the north, and about three miles to the northeast were the besieged British along the York River. Two miles to the east we ride into Surrender Field, where British General Cornwallis and his thousands of troops gave up their arms on October 19, 1781, effectively ending the American Revolution.

We bike on, through the battlefields, past the earthen redoubts where the Americans and French stormed the British positions in a surprise night attack. Cannon are strategically placed throughout the landscape, and in mock battle, David dismounts his iron steed and mans one of the cannon, then scrambles up the earthen redoubt. With the visitor center still closed, we continue on through Yorktown to the Victory Monument itself, a column of Maine granite almost 100 feet high with Lady Victory herself standing tall at the top, proclaiming proudly that this nation "of the people, by the people, and for the people" stands united, strong, and independent. Here, amid all the symbolism commemorating the defeat of the British and the birth of a nation, here is the official beginning of the 1976 Bikecentennial route that we'll follow across the country.

VIC-to-ry! VIC-to-ry! VIC-to-ry! Or perhaps it is heard as LIB-er-ty! LIB-er-ty! LIB-er-ty! How appropriate these mnemonics for the Carolina wren's song that explodes from the bushes at the edge of the clearing just beyond the monument. His challenges are answered almost immediately by three other males whose songs ripple into the distance. I listen intently to the pitch and rhythm of the responses; they're all different, each of the males, at least for now, choosing to sing what the others are not. But every five seconds each male chooses among several singing options, all made possible because each male has about 30 different renditions of this VIC-to-ry! song, with most of them learned from and therefore identical to those of his neighbors. The default choice for each male is to continue with the current version of his VIC-to-ry! song, and if they continue singing and relations remain peaceful, eventually each will switch to another song that none of his neighbors is singing at the moment. I listen for tensions to escalate, when neighbors are more likely to address each other with identical songs, but for now calm prevails.


Carolina wrens.

An escalated singing interaction, two males countering each other with matching songs. (5, 4:06)

I'm jarred from my listening by the crinkling of food wrappers beside me. What does it take to stoke a twenty-four-year-old across the country? I wonder, but I'm hungry, too. Over fig bars, a bagel, and some cheese, I explain to David how to listen to the wrens. "That's great, Pops." He seemed to be listening attentively, though judging from his tone of insincerity, he must be wondering how this will all play out over the coming weeks.

Far more unceremoniously than I had imagined, we take a last look around, check the map one more time, and mount our bikes, heading west down Yorktown's Main Street. Within 50 yards we turn right on Compte de Grasse Street, coast down about 200 yards to the York River itself at Cornwallis Cove, then take a left onto Water Street. In a flash, the entire trip unfolds before me, one road after another leading us beyond Yorktown all the way to the Pacific as we follow our Adventure Cycling maps through ten states, over four thousand miles in two to three months. For now, though, we've chosen an easy first day, a shake-down ride to test our bodies and bikes on the essentially flat coastal plain of Virginia. Within a mile we're on the Colonial National Historical Parkway, a 23-mile stretch of road that connects the battlefields of Yorktown with colonial Williamsburg and historic Jamestown.

"We cheated," announces David, more than half serious I sense, as he stops at a pull-off beside the York River. "Should have started on the Atlantic, not a river that dumps into the ocean." Given his rude assessment, with the word "tragedy" slipped in there somewhere, and faced with the stone wall we'd have to traverse with loaded bikes to reach the river, we forgo the usual cross-country ritual of dipping the rear tire into the water. I chuckle at the symbolism, the dipping of tires, how meaningless, but deep down a little voice nags at me that we didn't do this quite right. The little voice swells as I imagine standing on the Atlantic shore, listening to all the birds in the saltwater marshes there. Get over it, I advise myself.


Seaside sparrow.

Beside the Atlantic, wheezing two subtly different songs. (6, 2:06)

Fish crows and laughing gulls are suddenly everywhere. From the crows flying all about it's an outright laugh, a nasal caa-ha, caa-ha, or often a simple caa. The gulls laugh from fields beside the road and from high in the trees above the river — HA-a HA-a HA-a, every once in a while letting rip a wild, prolonged ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-hah-haah-haaah. It's an omen, I decide, the birds smiling on us and providing a hearty send-off for the journey of a lifetime. Yes, that's what I hear, and Thank you, I find myself saying, and I wish you well, too.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Listening to a Continent Sing by Donald Kroodsma. Copyright © 2016 Donald Kroodsma. Excerpted by permission of PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

How to Listen Using the QR Codes vii
Acknowledgments xi
Prologue xiii
1. Beginnings 1
2. Peace, and War 12
3. Lemonade 20
4. Blue Ridge Dawn 30
5. A Virginia High 44
6. Appalachia 56
7. Boone Country 68
8. A Ride in Heaven 74
9. Laid Up 82
10. On the Road Again 86
11. Dawn Sweeps the Shawnee 96
12. The Ozarks 106
13. A Prairie Gem 115
14. Kansas Oceans 125
15. Shortgrass Prairie 136
16. Western Birds 146
17. Riding the Rockies 153
18. Sage and Song 163
19. Hello, Wyoming 173
20. The Oregon Trail 179
21. Grand Tetons 190
22. Into the Fire 199
23. Caterpillars Marching 207
24. Chief Joseph Pass 217
25. Lewis and Clark 225
26. Pacific Islands Incoming 233
27. Ascending into Oregon 242
28. Geological Chaos 251
29. Over the Cascades 261
30. A Homecoming 270
31. Land’s End 280
Epilogue—Where Are They Now? 287
Notes 289
References 295
Index 299

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Kroodsma delivers a continent-wide perspective on birdsong, weaving behavior, habitat, and evolution into a fabric that is rolled out as he and his son make the East-West journey by bicycle. There is no better guide to take you on this journey, as no one has the breadth of knowledge and field experience with birdsong that Kroodsma has."—Greg Budney, Cornell Lab of Ornithology

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