Fifty-seven buzzards, one on each of fifty-seven fence posts at the Rancho
El Tejon, on a mirage-breeding September morning, sat solemnly while the white
tilted travelers’ vans lumbered down the Canada de los Uvas. After three hours
they had only clapped their wings, or exchanged posts. The season’s end in the
vast dim valley of the San Joaquin is palpitatingly hot, and the air breathes
like cotton wool. Through it all the buzzards sit on the fences and low
hummocks, with wings spread fanwise for air. There is no end to them, and they
smell to heaven. Their heads droop, and all their communication is a rare,
horrid croak.
The increase of wild creatures is in proportion to the things
they feed upon: the more carrion, the more buzzards. The end of the third
successive dry year bred them beyond belief. The first year, quail mated
sparingly; the second year, the wild oats matured no seed; the third, cattle
died in their tracks with their heads toward the stopped watercourses. And that
year the scavengers were as black as the plague all across the mesa and up the
treeless, tumbled hills. On clear days they betook themselves to the upper air,
where they hung motionless for hours. That year there were vultures among them,
distinguished by the white patches under the wings. All their offensiveness
notwithstanding, they have a stately flight. They must also have what pass for
good qualities among themselves, for they are social, not to say clannish.
It is a very squalid tragedy, that of the dying brutes and the
scavenger birds. Death by starvation is slow. The heavy-headed, rack-boned
cattle totter in the fruitless trails; they stand for long, patient intervals;
they lie down and do not rise. There is fear in their eyes when they are first
stricken but afterward only intolerable weariness. I suppose the dumb creatures
know nearly as much of death as do their betters, who have only the more
imagination. Their even-breathing submission after the first agony is their
tribute to its inevitableness. It needs a nice discrimination to say which of
the basket-ribbed cattle is likeliest to afford the next meal, but the
scavengers make few mistakes. One stoops to the quarry, and the flock follows.
Cattle once down may be days in
dying. They stretch out their necks along the ground and roll up their slow
eyes at longer intervals. The buzzards have all the time, and no beak is
dropped or talon struck until the breath is wholly passed. It is doubtless the
economy of nature to have the scavengers by to clean up the carrion, but a wolf
at the throat would be a shorter agony than the long stalking and sometime
perchings of these loathsome watchers. Suppose now it were a man in this
long-drawn, hungrily-spied-upon distress! When Timmie O’Shea was lost on
Armagosa Flats for three days without water, Long Tom Basset found him, not by
any trail, but by making straightaway for the points where he saw buzzards
stooping. He could hear the beat of their wings, Tom said, and trod on their
shadows, but O’Shea was past recalling what he thought about things after the
second day. My friend Ewan told me, among other things, when he came back from
San Juan Hill, that not all the carnage of battle turned his bowels as the
sight of slant black wings rising flockwise before the burial squad.
There are three kinds of noises buzzards make—it is impossible
to call them notes—raucous and elemental. There is a short croak of alarm, and
the same syllable in a modified tone to serve all the purposes of ordinary
conversation. The old birds make a kind of throaty chuckling to their young,
but if they have any love song I have not heard it. The young yawp in the nest
a little, with more breath than noise. It is seldom one finds a buzzard’s nest,
seldom that grownups find a nest of any sort; it is only children to whom these
things happen by right. But by making a business of it one may come upon them
in wide, quiet canyons, or on the lookouts of lonely, table-topped mountains,
three or four together, in the tops of stubby trees or on rotten cliffs well
open to the sky.
It is probable that the buzzard is gregarious, but it seems
unlikely from the small number of young noted at any time that every female
incubates each year. The young birds are easily distinguished by their size
when feeding, and high up in air by the worn primaries of the older birds. It
is when the young go out of the nest on their first foraging that the parents,
full of a crass and simple pride, make their indescribable chucklings of
gobbling, gluttonous delight. The little ones would be amusing as they tug and
tussle, if one could forget what it is they feed upon.
One never comes any nearer to the vulture’s nest or nestlings
than hearsay. They keep to the southerly Sierras, and are bold enough, it
seems, to do killing on their own account when no carrion is at hand. They dog
the shepherd from camp to camp, the hunter home from the hill, and will even
carry away offal from under his hand.
The vulture merits respect for his bigness and for his bandit
airs, but he is a somber bird, with none of the buzzard’s frank satisfaction in
his offensiveness.
The least objectionable of the inland scavengers is the raven,
frequenter of the desert ranges, the same called locally “carrion crow.” He is
handsomer and has such an air. He is nice in his habits and is said to have likable
traits. A tame one in a Shoshone camp was the butt of much sport and enjoyed
it. He could all but talk, but was an arrant thief. The raven will eat most
things that come his way—eggs and young of ground-nesting birds, seeds even,
lizards and grasshoppers, which he catches cleverly; and whatever he is about,
let a coyote trot never so softly by, the raven flaps up and after; for
whatever the coyote can pull down or nose out is meat also for the carrion
crow.
And never a coyote comes out of his
lair for killing in the country of the carrion crows but looks up first to see
where they may be gathering. It is a sufficient occupation for a windy morning,
on the lineless, level mesa, to watch the pair of them eying each other
furtively, with a tolerable assumption of unconcern, but no doubt with a
certain amount of good understanding about it. Once at Red Rock, in a year of
green pasture, which is a bad time for the scavengers, we saw two buzzards,
five ravens, and a coyote feeding on the same carrion, and only the coyote
seemed ashamed of the company.
Probably we never fully credit the
interdependence of wild creatures and their cognizance of the affairs of their
own kind. When the five coyotes that range the Tejon from Pasteria to Tunawai
planned a relay race to bring down an antelope strayed from the band, beside
myself to watch, an eagle swung down from Mt. Pinos, buzzards materialized out
of invisible ether, and hawks came trooping like small boys to a street fight.
Rabbits sat up in the chaparral and cocked their ears, feeling themselves quite
safe for the once as the hunt swung near them. Nothing happens in the deep wood
that the blue jays are not all agog to tell. The hawk follows the badger, the
coyote the carrion crow, and from their aerial stations the buzzards watch each
other. What would be worth knowing is how much of their neighbor’s affairs the
new generations learn for themselves, and how much they are taught of their
elders. ¥¥
–
Mary Austin, from The Land of Little Rain. Austin
began to write the pieces that comprise this book in the fall of 1900—when
“life stood at a breathing pause between the old ways and the new”—and
published the titular sketch in 1903 in The Atlantic Monthly.
Austin observed, “Desert is a loose term to indicate land that supports no man;
whether the land can be bitted and broken to that purpose is not proven.”
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