"As the Whip-poor-will's Chant Wanes."

Last September, I traveled to New York State to try to hear a Whip-poor-will. The time was only partly right to hear them, which is another way of saying it was partly wrong.

Sure, the moon was full, and Whip-poor-wills sing more vigorously under a full moon. But it was September. Autumn migration approached. Whip-poor-wills tend not sing regularly in late-summer and early-autumn.

And so, for days, the trip seemed futile. My brother and I drove around the Hudson Valley — stopping at roadside pull-offs, state parks, camp sites. We put our hands to our ears, amplifying distant sounds. A Barred Owl. Endless frogs. Passing traffic. But no Whip-poor-will.

After three or four nights like this, I began worrying at I’d crossed the country to tell a story of not hearing a Whip-poor-will. And as I free wrote, that’s what, in fact, it was.

And then it became something else: a story of environmental worry, a story of loss and nostalgia, and a story, eventually, of the icon of the eastern woods.

A few days ago, Audubon published my essay “As the Whip-poor-will’s Chant Wanes, Our Cultural Loss Grows,” about all of this.

"As the Whip-poor-will's Chant Wanes" addresses many of the themes I'm writing about in my new book about Whip-poor-wills.

For more, visit my website The Lonesome Whip-poor-will.
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Published on May 11, 2024 14:26 Tags: birds, nature-writing
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