For the Birds Radio Program: Cardinals
Laura talks about a bird from further south that appears up here now and then. (3:46)
Transcript
Cardinals
(Recording of a Cardinal)
A lot of people living in the Northland came here from somewhere else–and almost invariably somewhere south. Wise people from Minneapolis, Chicago, and other tropical areas appreciate living by Lake Superior: it’s beautiful, its temperature is just right for cooling down a can of pop if you run out of ice in mid-July, and, best of all, you hardly ever swelter up here–air conditioning not only costs billions of dollars in other cities–it’s also limited to buildings–the whole outdoors in the Twin Cities is hot and unpleasant just about all summer. Duluth is on the shore of, and holds free rights to, the world’s largest built-in, natural air-conditioner. And think of all the time wasted in other cities–people must put away their winter clothes every single summer and pull out a whole new wardrobe. In Duluth, wool is in fashion all year. Our winters aren’t plagued with too many of those untimely thaws, leaving the snow all sooty and pock-marked and exposing dead, brown grass.
Yes, we in Duluth have cleverly escaped heat spells and muddy winters and all the other unpleasant conditions of more southern climes. We would truly be in paradise here if we had only one thing–something that people further south take for granted–the cardinal.
Even Northland natives recognize the cardinal, that crested red bird that sings pretty, pretty, pretty or cheer, cheer, cheer. Cardinals are unusual in that both males and females sing year-round.
(Recording of a Cardinal)
Cardinals are not migratory birds, although individuals may roam extensively. They used to be even more of a southern species than they are now–they’re slowly but steadily extending their range northward. In the nineteenth century, cardinals did not breed anywhere in Minnesota, although they occasionally visited. By the mid-1930’s they were breeding regularly in the Twin Cities. In the 60’s, they were up as far north as Morrison County. Every year there are several sightings of individual cardinals in Duluth, Superior, and towns along the shore, like Port Wing, Wisconsin. You might be sitting at your window, watching the chickadees, when all of a sudden a splash of red catches your eye. You rub your binoculars in disbelief, but, sure enough, it’s a cardinal. They usually only spend a few days, but sometimes an individual cardinal will stick around for a month or more.
Cardinals are fond of sunflower seeds. Your best chance of attracting one is to have a lot of birds, like evening grosbeaks, coming to your feeder regularly. When a lost cardinal arrives in town, invariably without a map or auto club guide, noisy birds will be its best clue to a good bird restaurant. Sooner or later, a male and female are bound to arrive together, and maybe in ten or twenty years cardinals will be regular breeders up here. Then that optimistic South Shore High School team will finally be able to live up to its name–the South Shore Cardinals.
(Recording of a Cardinal)
This is Laura Erickson, and this program has been “For the Birds.”