It landed on the snag. I was, I
must admit, too awestruck to even think about my camera. It was huge.
The description fit. It hitched it's neck, and turned it, looking
behind. I was later told by one expert on that bird that even an
Ivory Billed Woodpecker probably could not do that. But then, he had
never seen a living Ivory Billed Woodpecker, and this bird did that.
As it walked out a limb, certain distinguishing markings were very
clear to me. Unfortunately, my forgotten camera sat idle in my hands,
and I just gawked.
A pileated woodpecker has a white
line running from it's head to it's wing, disappearing under its wing
when the wings are folded, as this one was. The Ivory Billed
Woodpecker's white line goes up onto the wing, and down the length of
it.
This
bird had that white line, the full length of the wing.
That marking was very clear to me.
The first rays of the morning sun spotlighted the bird as he reached
the end of the limb. My camera suddenly came awake, and I shot again
and again. The bird flew. Afterwords, I went over what I saw and what
I did not see in my mind carefully. The angle of my view was pretty
steep. I had no memory of seeing the white shield on the back. I
felt, at some point, though, I could have seen that. But, it was not
in my memory afterwords.
I heard the "Bam, bam, bam,
-- bam!" drumming sound, totally different from the Pileated
wood Pecker, three more times that morning. Then it was time to go
home. Deer season started up again the next day, and there would be
hunters swarming this area, so I stayed away a few days.
I knew I would need all the help a
great lab could give me with those pictures. From our professional
days, I knew just the lab. I instructed them to "push" the
film two stops. It was still very early in the morning for a film
camera. I had no digital camera at that time. It was at about the
time, 2006, when digital was beginning to take over, film was about
to become a thing of the past.
It took several days, during which I
knew I had the first modern day photo of an Ivory Billed Woodpecker.
I was torn. Should I make it public, and risk an influx of people
running the birds off? Or should I keep their secret, hopefully
allowing them to make some sort of comeback in that very isolated
place? The habitat was great. The Ouachita Mountains arose out of
that river, with thousands of acres of pine timber. Down river about
a mile, there was a very large plot of beetle killed pines, very
attractive to large woodpeckers. They simply strip the dead bark off
the tree, and eat the beetles underneath. Hundreds of acres.
When the pictures arrived, I had
the best books I could find in hand, showing all the markings. But,
after studying the best photo, I knew it would not hold up. The bird
had turned toward me, and the wing markings were indistinct. The best
photo was not totally sharp.
I was still torn. I knew what I
knew, but I had no real evidence. I decided to contact the man who
was, it seemed, considered to be the world's expert on that bird. I
discussed my situation several times with him, and I sent him my
picture. After studying it, he said he needed a video. One
questionable photo was not enough. While I knew I was lacking in
proof, I did see that bird well, and there was not a bit of doubt in
my mind. I bought a good video camera, and went to work. I set up
several blinds, some with bait stations. About fifteen mornings that
winter, I left home at twoAM, arriving in the river bottoms at
daylight. But, to make a long story short, I never heard that
particular drumming sound again, though I saw many Pileated
Woodpeckers, and never another sighting. I downloaded the actual
sounds of the Ivory Billed Woodpecker, made over half a century ago,
and amplified and broadcast them out. The Blue Jays went crazy. Their
sound is similar. I videoed several birds responding to that call,
but they all turned out to be a dead end. One particular bird that
responded seemed to sound a little different. I only saw it through
my video viewfinder, and my video only showed a few flaps of its
wings before it disappeared over the tree tops. Since my only view
was through the video view finder, I could tell little about the real
size of the bird. I could not stop the action at a point where I
could see markings that would tell me something. I called the
expert. I asked him, "If I send you a video I have, will you
call me back and give me an opinion?" He replied, "I'd be
glad to, Pat." I sent it. A few hours later, I managed to stop
the video at a critical point. Markings showed. I knew it was not
what I had hoped. I waited to see if he was a man of his word. He
never replied. Since he was not a man of his word, even to give me a
negative answer, that told me a lot about this expert. That was our
last communication.
The last morning I spent looking
for the Ivory Billed Woodpecker, the Corps of Engineers did a control
burn on my plot, and the fire ran me out. My blinds and bait stations
were destroyed. I knew by now the Corps of Engineers were curious
about what I was doing there so often, and a local farmer was also,
seeing me drive by his house so often. He sent word to me, "If
there are Ivory Billed Woodpeckers down there, I'll shoot every one
of them." I sent word back, "If you can find one down
there, you're a better man than I am." I decided it was time to
drop this search, and let that totally isolated spot become isolated
again.
I knew I could never conveince
anybody else with my lack of evidence. But I know what I saw, that
morning in November. 2006. And to my dying day, I will always remain
conveinced that the Ivory Bill Woodpecker was alive and well in the
Fourche River bottoms in 2006. Their secret is safe. Maybe, that's as
it should be. That was one difficult decision I didn't have to make.
Making such a claim as I have made here, without proof, makes one
seem to be somewhat of a kook, so I have since been hesitant to talk
about this, and I have told few people. I felt they may have raised
young that year in that hollow tree I saw the one in. But if so, they
have moved on. I pray they are making some sort of a comeback in
those thousands of acres of the Ouachita National forest near by. I
won't bother them again. Six years have passed. I decided to tell it
here.
The world needs to know.
Please do not ask for details
about the location. I will not tell. That area is totally isolated,
with no good reason for people to come in, except to deer hunt. It
needs to stay that way.
*********
This story was the most read story of 2012. Thanks for your time, and your attention.
Did you inform that farmer of the jail time he would face if he shot ivory-bills?
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