Looking for White-winged Crossbills might make your hair go gray, but it鈥檚 absolutely worth it.
Having lived through the experience, I can tell you that I had my doubts鈥攕tanding on the edge of a New York state thruway at daybreak, rapidly losing my limbs to the -15-degree chill. Lucky for me, though, I was with Joan Collins. And you can鈥檛 doubt the queen of crossbills.
But before I get too far along into my adventure, let鈥檚 back up and talk more about crossbills. They鈥檙e exactly as their name describes: a bunch of finches with an extreme overbite. Their crossover is tighter than Allen Iverson鈥檚 and 鈥淎vengers: Infinity Wars鈥 combined. Even better, it鈥檚 handy for attacking pine, spruce, and other cones. As Kenn Kaufman explains in his column on White-winged Crossbills, the birds wedge their mandibles under the scales, scissor the tips together, and use their tongues to pull out the good stuff. One crossbill, Kaufman writes, can devour up to 3,000 seeds in a day.
That means crossbills can only be found where there are conifers. Here in the United States, we have three of the six species: Red, White-winged, and . The first lives along the Canadian border and out West; the second in the boreal forests of Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Maine; and the third exclusively in Idaho.
Fortunately, there鈥檚 been plenty of crossbill love to go around in 2018. Thanks to a 鈥溾 in the northern states, the tops of the evergreens are bursting with cones, causing Red and White-winged nomads to detour from the Canadian wilds. In upstate New York, they invaded white pines, black spruces, hemlocks, and tamaracks in the Adirondack forest. It鈥檚 the strongest showing in the region since 2001, Collins says.
Living in the woodsy town of Long Lake, New York (major 鈥淭win Peaks鈥 vibes), Collins follows the crossbills with fanatical precision. For her, it鈥檚 part business鈥攕he runs as a licensed guide鈥攁nd part scientific curiosity鈥攕he holds rank with the NYS Ornithological Association and , and is organizing for 2020. She visits the busiest fringes of the boreal nearly every day to study the crossbills鈥 antics, from feeding to socializing to nesting. More than a decade of practice has honed her to pick up the faintest of sounds, key them out, and pinpoint the locations. 鈥淚 make 90 percent of my IDs by ear,鈥 Collins says. She truly is a crossbill queen.
After reading Collins鈥檚 field notes on a birding listserv, I decided the time had come. Having gone 27 years without seeing a crossbill, my life was feeling incomplete. I needed to make the four-hour drive from New Jersey to Long Lake, and I needed to convince Collins that I was worthy of her company.
Which brings me back to my premature grays on that sub-zero Sunday. Joined by two seasoned birders from Long Island, our first stop for crossbills was a piney patch along Route 30. Normally, birding on a 50-mile-per-hour road isn鈥檛 recommended, but it was safe and quiet in the early hour. While I puzzled over the white hairs that had magically appeared under my hat (frost, of course), Collins was listening for under the Pine Siskins and chickadees. Sometimes, she says, the crossbills' foraging calls are mistaken for Red-breasted Nuthatches鈥.
Just as I was about to flee to the car, a sign: a male White-winged Crossbill, grenadine-red, popped out of a gnarl of cones to bask in the light. We watched it as it posed and sang鈥.
It was a chance sighting. Even if you can trace the sounds and know where to aim your lenses, crossbills are hard to spot as they forage in the tops of the trees. A better bet, Collins says, is to find them while they鈥檙e 鈥済ritting.鈥 Crossbills and other finches to help with seed digestion, leading to excellent views for birders. Sadly, it also leads to more hits-and-runs for the birds.
Sure enough, after driving through the Whitney Wilderness Area, we came across a big roadside flock of Red and White-winged Crossbills, Pine Siskins, and Purple Finches. This time we had both female and male crossbills鈥攁 delicious contrast of honey and hot sauce.
In the days following our trip, Collins noticed that most of the females had disappeared. 鈥淭hat tells me they're now on the nests,鈥 she says. The birds are temperamental when it comes to laying eggs: They鈥檒l breed in any season, as long as food is in rich supply. Collins has gotten close looks at crossbills chicks, which are born with ; the overbite, she says, sets in after about 30 days. At day 45, they're ready to mine seeds themselves.
About those beaks: There鈥檚 no rhyme or reason to how they cross. Well, there鈥檚 probably some reason鈥攂ut as far as scientists know, it鈥檚 random and not based on inheritance. In Red Crossbills there seems to be an even split between left-over-right and right-over-left. In White-winged Crossbills the odds are about 75 to 25, respectively.
I didn鈥檛 notice these details during my first crossbill outing. Like most newbies, I was busy ogling and staving off hypothermia. I should also mention that you don鈥檛 have to freeze your nuts off for crossbills; if you live near their range, you might end up with one at your feeders in winter or early spring. (Hint: Red Crossbills like black oil sunflower seeds; White-wingeds go mad for thistle.) And if you find yourself in the Adirondacks in a non-bumper-crop season, listen for instead. The Black-backed Woodpeckers live there all year, and they aren鈥檛 too shabby, either.
Purbita Saha is the associate editor at 爆料公社. She really likes birds and people who like birds. Look for more of her writing in the Birding and Science sections, or in the front of the magazine.