A Startling Story of Starlings
And nightly under the simple stars
As I rode to sleep the owls were bearing the farm
away,
All the moon
long I heard, blessed among stables, the nightjars
Flying with the ricks…
Dylan Thomas, Fern
Hill
It was dusk, 1957. They came in from the north, the
sky black and blue with them. In great drifts of dark turbulence they settled
among the trees along Chapel, Henry, and Walton Streets depositing their day’s dinner
on sidewalks, lawns and verandas. Starlings. Thousands of starlings. Tens of
thousands of starlings. Night after night. All summer long. Year in, year out.
Starlings. STARLINGS!!!
Incredibly,
a poet played a part in their introduction to North America. Shakespeare had referenced
the mimicking abilities of starlings in Henry IV, Part 1 wherein Hotspur desired
to drive King Henry delirious with a trained starling. “The king forbade my
tongue to speak of Mortimer. But I will find him when he is asleep, and in his
ear I'll holler 'Mortimer!' Nay I'll have a starling shall be taught to speak
nothing but Mortimer, and give it to him to keep his anger still in motion”
The American Acclimatization Society in New York thought
it a wonderful tribute to introduce North America with every bird mentioned in
Shakespeare’s scripts. The Bard’s birds included more than 600 avian species. The
hundred starlings released in 1890 are 200
million today.
In 1957, neighbourhood kids huddled around their black
and whites to watch the debut of the picket-fence serenity of Leave It To
Beaver. Outside, the starlings were in full chatter. Inside, the residents were
in full batter and bruised mode. As Sputnik 1 drifted across the heavens, no
one knew that one of the most bizarre episodes in Cobourg’s history was about
to unfold.
And from the realms
Of the shadowy elms
A tide-like darkness overwhelms
Of the shadowy elms
A tide-like darkness overwhelms
But the night is fair,
And everywhere
A warm, soft vapor fills the air,
And above, in the light
Of the star-lit night,
Swift birds of passage wing their flight
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Cobourg finally had it up to the ankles with birdboo.
How bad was it? Early mornings saw town trucks hosing down the streets and
sidewalks. Fire trucks were brought in occasionally to rinse/repeat/rinse the
trees.
Residents of the day commented:
“You can’t
look up with your mouth open.”
“People can’t
sleep because they have to keep their windows shut.”
An elderly woman resident of Chapel Street said, “I would like to get up into the tree after
them myself. They have wakened me up at 4:30am for the past 16 years. They fly
off during the day but the terrible things come back in the evening. You can
see by the sidewalk the mess they make. We have had to scrub it and scrub it.
The odour is something terrific.”
Housewives, if they had to walk the street in the
early evening, did so with open umbrellas. Not a rain cloud was in sight.
“THE TREES ALL SAG, STREETS TURN WHITE”, read the headline.
“The starlings
are back in town and Chapel Street near Walton and Henry resembles a
white-washed fence. If there is one thing to be said about starlings, it is
that they are well-talented in pursuit of painting the trees white. They are
also heavy and noisy. There are trees sagging under their numbers, and the air
rings with their twittering. Fortunately it rains frequently and the streets
have a temporary return to asphalt blackness then water runs fast and grey in
the gutters.”
Neighbourhood children, well, boys actually, exploited
the mess of manure. After tv dinner, oven doors closed, screen doors slammed
and Davey Crockett kids ran rocket, then slip, slide and surf the sidewalks
glistening with the freshmess of yuckmuck. Heedless glee, cheers and chatter,
as Fig did a bumburn, while Whopper ‘faced’ the consequence of a major oops!
Laundry bills in the neighbourhood rose higher than the flight of a frightened herd
of birds.
I have wished a bird would fly away,
And not sing by my house all day;
Have clapped my hands at him from the door
When it seemed as if I could bear no more.
And not sing by my house all day;
Have clapped my hands at him from the door
When it seemed as if I could bear no more.
Robert Frost
Hurricane Hazel downed Chapel Street’s only chestnut
tree the previous year, so a handy supply of brown nuts for bird bashing was no
longer available. Marbles, especially bonkers, were too precious to squander on
any bird. Sticks never make it through the branches to the teasing targets. But
slapping slats made a slambam birdbang sharp as a .22 causing maple trees to explode
in a flurry of wings, leaves and feces of fear.
Parents demanded a poop-free zone. Cobourg Council
responded.
Councillor J. J. Fullerton, chair of the Health,
Sanitation and Sewage Disposal Committee declared that starlings were “responsible for the spread of certain
diseases of the skin and respiratory system… they attract parasitic insects,
their droppings nurture germs. The clean-up of bird droppings on sidewalks
around schools and public buildings is a definite menace to workmen.”
Councillor Fullerton presented Roost No More, a
substance to be spread on trees that gave a “hot foot” to the birds coming in
to roost. Picture it, roughly shaved men dressed in red plaid flannel Kenora
formal wear sprinkling fairy dust onto the tip top of trees to scorch the
tender tootsies of the demon starlings.
If the avian swarmers had been yellow Finches, little
nuggets of sunshine flitting about, or red Cardinals, or orange Baltimore
Orioles, or Scarlet Tanagers, or Red Wing Blackbirds, resident rage roaming the
streets in lynch mob mode would have remained an Alabama cultural event. Birds
of colour wouldn’t behave this way – only black birds full of white excrementality
got the hot foot massage message. Pirouette on this, you %#$@&^% birds!
The local newspaper reassured the town that there was
no “question of cruelty in ridding a
community of birds with such a compound. The birds are not killed by the
preparation they are merely encouraged to move.” Chemical warfare was on.
Or was it?
Later that summer Councillor Jones nagged: “Have they had their hot foot?”
Councillor Fullerton: “The stuff’s here but we can’t go ahead until we take the tops off some
of the trees.”
Jones: “Well if
you wait long enough the birds will be gone.”
Fullerton: “Well
then, we’ll do it in the spring.”
Jones: “Sure.”
Sure as shootin’ it didn`t happen. The starlings proliferated,
causing one Chapel Street resident to lose it. He climbed to the gables of his
house and fired his shotgun into the trees. The local paper reported no dead
birds, no complaints made, no charges laid, things became normal. If you, dear
reader, thought this wild west mess couldn’t get worse, read on.
We had fed the heart on fantasies
The heart’s grown brutal from the fare;
More substance in our enmities
Than in our love; O honey-bees,
Come build in the empty house of the
stare
William Butler Yeats
(THE
FOLLOWING CONTAINS VIOLENCE AND HATRED.
READER
DISCRETION IS ADVISED.)
The Cobourg Sentinel Star, September 11, 1958,
reported, “It was National ‘Hate
Starlings’ Night … when angered residents armed with 12-guage shotguns” prowled “about the streets in the most heavily
populated areas. For several hours the town reverberated to the noise of guns.
It sounded like the Gunfight at the OK Corral was being rerun for the benefit
of Cobourg.”
The report went on to describe that “children ran about excitedly in the waning
light carrying bushel baskets into which they threw fallen birds.” Yes, it’s
true. The paper did not report that the neighbourhood boys had been armed with
firecrackers, especially ‘cannon crackers’ for shoving down the throats of
wounded birds. The stuffed birds were thrown into the trees the moment the
sizzling fuse reached the beak. It was Lord of the Flies as grenades of
gore-gob detonated in a furious flurry of feathers hither and yon gone. Without
pumping irony, the paper reported, “Police
cruised about the area keeping things under control.”
The next morning, while town trucks washed the blood,
feathers and gore from the sidewalks and street, Police Chief, Hod Pearse,
announced that an estimated 1200 starlings had been massacred that warm autumn
night. Later that week, nearby churches chirped:
“Behold the
fowls of the air: for they sow not, neither do they reap, nor gather into
barns; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are ye not much better than
they?”
Matthew 6:26
The birds returned to Ground Zero with a vengeance the
following year. The battle was engaged. Town council easily approved $50 for
ammo. Deputy Reeve Erskine described the congestion of so many starlings that
they now roosted on verandas; “The mess was unbearable,” he said. The newspaper
reported that “Mr Erskine’s expression indicated the state in which this
particular veranda could be found.”
Town Council formed an ad hoc ‘Extermination Committee’
to formulate a lasting solution. This year the starling shoot was to be
supplemented with sound effects; the agony of defeat and despair. Residents
came out from all over town to witness the spectacle of sharp-shooters with
instructions to wound a bird or two. For what you ask? Well, it gets worse.
(THE FOLLOWING CONTAINS VIOLENCE,
TORTURE & HATRED. READER DISCRETION IS WELL-ADVISED.)
It’s not easy to wound a starling. A bullet to the
beak or body is instant death for such a small creature. So it took a couple dozen
deaths before a wounded starling fell and flopped inappropriately on the ground.
Recording equipment was rushed to the bird; a microphone was shoved to its beak
as it wailed out in agony. Break a leg, break a wing, prolong the moment, get
it on tape. Hurry before it dies.
The following week, summer simmernoons brought the
cling clang of the ice cream truck. The Beav Boys and Eddie Hassle fled their
homes with a dime in hand worth two scoops in the cone. At dusk a new truck
appeared on the street to disrupt the usual shinny games. It was outfitted with
three speakers. For the next two hours every weekday evening, (union rules) it
roamed the neighbourhood streets blasting out the death cries.
The trees exploded with starlings bombarding the
streets with birdboo. As it passed they settled back to roost. Over and over
again it went. Children watched boring re-runs of Father Knows Best, looking
forward to the next gunfight outside.
So luminous
with living wings,
So musical with feathered joy . . .
Not for all pleasure fortune brings,
Would I such ecstasy destroy.
Robert Service
So musical with feathered joy . . .
Not for all pleasure fortune brings,
Would I such ecstasy destroy.
Robert Service
The slaughter became more problematic by 1961. Mayor
Jack Heenan declared that “No one wants
to dispose of the dead starlings because everyone is such a good shot.” The
police chief upped the budget to $80 for ammo. Councillor R J Cooper preferred
a shootout over loudspeakers because “It’s a little more severe and the
starlings fall down dead.” By the thousands.
Councillor Thomas revealed just how desperate the
situation had become, declaring, “The citizens say we can remove every tree if it
will get rid of them.” The discussion turned to water proof loudspeakers and
amplifier mounted in the trees at Chapel and College. The Public Utilities
Commission came under fire for inexplicably removing the wires to the speakers.
Cobourg Councillor, Lenah Fisher’s debut appearance at
council was an offer of free dinner at Marie Dressler House to the man who
killed the most starlings. Not to be outdone, the pro-squawkbox councillors
suggested the snuff tape be played over the radio station so residents could
place their sets in the windows with the volume topped to torment the birds. I’M
MAD AS HELL AND I’M NOT GOING TAKE IT ANY MORE!
So there it was, the summer of 61; Wally, Beav and the
boys distracted by urgent turbulent hormones ignored the nightly howl of horror
amid the occasional carnage of gunfire; seeking refuge on The Three Hills in Victoria
Park; the discussion was about emerging zits.
1962. What happened? Where were they? The tens of
thousands of starlings? Few noticed their absence as they casually walked the
streets in open toed shoes and sandals. The kids began twisting at the ‘Pav’ in
Victoria Park and spawning to dawn under the simple stars over the parent-free
wild West Beach.
Cobourg once again turned it’s super-dooper uber-sensitive
attention to the perpetual whinefest concerning the use and abuse of Victoria
Park.
Come, on wings
of joy we'll fly
To where my bower hangs on high;
Come, and make thy calm retreat
Among green leaves and blossoms sweet.
To where my bower hangs on high;
Come, and make thy calm retreat
Among green leaves and blossoms sweet.
William Blake
Reports trickled back to Cobourg that the starlings had
chosen to roost in a New England sea-side community where they starred in a
1963 Alfred Hitchcock documentary drearily titled, The Birds.