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What鈥檚 brown and brown and brown all over? What skulks like a cat, camouflages like a chameleon, thrives in all climates and weathers, and is mainly overlooked? What鈥檚 our best metaphor for insignificance? It鈥檚 the sparrow! Here鈥檚 how to go sparrow-spotting鈥攁nd truly appreciate these common little birds!
The Unassuming Sparrow
It lives in our gravel pits, power-line cuts, bus terminals, and coal mines. Its song is a jingling trill, a gasp, a gurgle, a wheeze, a buzz. It eats spiders in the Atlantic salt marshes, cinquefoil buds on the Alaskan tundra, and seeds from the Mojave prickly pear.
No bird is more unassuming, adaptable, or democratic than the sparrow. This family of birds, known as the Emberizidae, is native to all fifty American states, plus thirteen Canadian provinces and territories, yet has never had a representative elected to the office of State Bird or Provincial Emblem. Why the outrageous neglect?
What the sparrow has going for it is exactly what people have against it. Scratching in the leaf litter or peeking out of dense grasses, sparrows are shy and blend in beautifully with their surroundings. Most are some shade of brown, with streaky camouflage on the back or breast, and their love of brambly shadows doesn鈥檛 make identification any easier. Backyard birders often dismiss them out of hand as 鈥LBJs鈥 or 鈥淟ittle Brown Jobs.鈥 Where does one begin?
The House Sparrow
Try right outside your front door. Sparrows鈥 great redeeming virtue is their ubiquity, if not their visibility. In the fall, they are migrating past us by the thousands. Chances are, wherever you live, in late October, you may have five to seven species of sparrow hanging out within a five-minute walk of your back porch. If you can find a neglected patch of public park, or a brushy hedgerow beside an open field, you鈥檙e in sparrow country.
The first sparrow you are likely to see, if you live in a town, city, village, suburb, or metropolis, is probably the famous (and infamous) House Sparrow. Prepare yourself for this shocking news: The House Sparrow is not related to our other sparrows. At least not our North American Emberizidae. It鈥檚 actually more closely related to our finch species! It was introduced from Europe into New York鈥檚 Central Park in 1864 and, since then, has spread like wildfire around the continent, taking up residence in chimneys, gutters, window-sills, and attics, just to name a few. The male House Sparrow has a distinctive black throat and bib; the female is a much plainer brown. Once you feel comfortable identifying this species, walk on.
Sparrow-Spotting
Here鈥檚 how to go sparrow-spotting. Grab a pair of binoculars and take them to your neighborhood鈥檚 brushiest, scrubbiest, raggedest patch of vegetation. Sparrows are usually found at a very human height from the ground, usually six feet or less. Watch for movement. And listen: as sparrows forage for food, they often make a sound like someone trying and failing to strike a match, over and over. You can even train your ear to tell the difference between one type of match and another.
When you see a sparrow, what should you look for? Many sparrows have distinctive patterns around the head, for instance. Does the bird have a rusty red cap? Any white at the throat? Does it have white or brown streaks above the eyes like an old-fashioned football helmet?
Clarence 鈥淎ce鈥 Parker c. 1938 (one of our most Song-Sparrow-like quarterbacks)
Next, see if you can get a look at the pattern on the breast of the bird. Is it streaky or clean? Is there a central 鈥渢ie-pin鈥 where the streaks converge in the center of the breast? Are the streaks thick and blurry, or thin and fine? Take notes about these characteristics to help you remember what you鈥檝e seen. Back at home, dust off any old field guide to the birds, and see if you can narrow down your humdrum sparrow to a particular species. Once you鈥檝e given it a name and learned a little bit about how it lives, no sparrow seems quite so humdrum.
Hamlet, coming to the end of his own play, paraphrases the New Testament by saying, 鈥淭here is special providence in the fall of a sparrow鈥濃攎eaning, I guess, that there鈥檚 significance in the lives of the least of the least of earthly Creation. Surely that鈥檚 true. But who picked out the sparrow to be the least of the least of creatures? Can鈥檛 we leave that unfortunate title to, oh, I don鈥檛 know, woolly aphids?
Catherine Boeckmann loves nature, stargazing, and gardening so it鈥檚 not surprising that she and The Old Farmer鈥檚 蜜桃恋人 found each other. She leads digital content for the 蜜桃恋人 website, and is also a certified master gardener in the state of Indiana. Read More from Catherine Boeckmann
I am negative because these birds destroy what God had originally created for this area. We are responsible to be stewards of the lands we are given and to preserve them the way they were given to us.
I've watched sparrows with second graders at school. They were proud that they could identify the house sparrow. Now I have some more information for them. I watched chipping sparrows at my feeder in the spring. Your article was fun to read since I'm still learning.