Showing posts with label Georgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georgia. Show all posts

18 May 2014

Miscellaneous Reading - A Georgia Pigeon Roost

The Whole Sky Darkened for Miles With a Pigeon Tornado.

A letter from Clarksville, Georgia to the Germantown Telegraph contains the following graphic account of a Georgia pigeon roosts, which it would, seem eclipsed the Kentucky roost:

This roost occurred in the month of February; the place selected by the pigeons was on the banks of the Chattooga river, near the confluence with the Tugalo, on the eastern line of this county, where the mountains rise abruptly on either side; a wilder and more inaccessible a place could not have been found in the United States. Our party consisted of four persons, all armed with good double-barreled guns and mounted on horseback. We started about three o'clock p.m. for the roost. After fording the Tugalo we skirted along the breakneck sides of the mountain until we came within a half mile or so of the beginning of the roost, which extended over an area of some five miles or more. Here we were obliged to leave our horses and take the rest of the trip on foot. The sun was now about half an hour high, and the pigeons had just begun to come in. As we were high up on the side of the mountains on the west side of the river, our position was an excellent one to see the innumerable flocks as they poured over the mountain tops into the valley. As we did not wish to enter the roost until after sunset, we remained an hour or so viewing the immense host of birds which no man could number; from east to west, north and south they came in flocks of all sizes, roaring and rushing through the air, whirling and sweeping in every direction.

It being our intention to go near the centre of the roost and spend the night there at a camp prepared by an old hunter of the neighborhood, we started as it begun to grow a little dusk, leaving our horses securely tied to saplings. As our camp was on the east side of the Chattonga we forded it on foot, and soon entered the edge of the roost, where there were myriads of pigeons and myriads still coming from every direction. As we were bound for the camp which was still a mile distant, the difficulty was how to get along, as the numbers on the trees were so great that there was a constant crash of the limbs breaking from the trees, making it hazardous to skulls and limbs to pass under them. To move the pigeons out of the path we had to resort to firing volleys among them which had the effect to move them so that we could pass along with safety. — An amusing incident or accident occurred to one of our party who was walking by the side of the writer; his name was George Gable; he had a pretty large talkative mouth usually more or less open, and as it was now early dark and the pigeons flying in every direction from the breaking of the timber, one came like a bullet directly into George's mouth, and killed itself outright!

After reaching camp and resting awhile, we divided into two parties and began shooting, and all we had to do was select trees which were filled with birds and fire into the midst of them as near as we could : it being dark no precise aim could be taken, but looking up we could distinguish the dark tree tops sufficiently well to get an aim. On firing at a mass of them they would fly a short distance and settle again, but as there were plenty of trees filled with them, we did not have to run many steps to get another shot. After every shot we could hear the birds fall amongst the universal din, some on the ground and some in the river. We kept firing at intervals until midnight, when we gave up and returned into camp to await for daylight to pick up the game.

Shortly after daylight, on going over the ground where they had roosted, it had the appearance of having been visited by a tornado; numbers of trees with trunks a foot or more in diameter, which grew in a leaning position from the side of the mountain, were broken off near the ground, while thousands of limbs of all sizes were split from the trees. The great noise and confusion continued until three o'clock in the morning when all became hushed and silent as death, save now and then the howl of the wolf, the bark of the fox and the scream of the wildcat, which hold high carnival on the occasion. — Shortly after daylight in the morning the flocks commenced reforming, and started off on their morning foraging expeditions, which extend to a hundred miles or more in every direction, to return in like manner as before. This roost was continued about two weeks, when they moved off to the north. — Near its close it was almost impossible to enter upon the ground they had occupied in consequence of the manure which not only covered the ground but every stick and bush. On going over the ground in the morning to collect the birds we had shot during the night, we found many that were killed and maimed by the falling timber. How many we had killed could not be ascertained, as numbers fell into the river and were carried down the stream. We brought out, however, 535 birds, which were as many as we could comfortably carry. While searching about in a laurel thicket for the dead birds, we came across a pile of a peck or more of gizzards, which had been left there by some 'varmint,' probably a wildcat, which did not appear to relish them as food."

March 29, 1871. Juniata Sentinel 25(13): 1. Issued at Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pennsylvania.

Acres of Wild Pigeons at Oakland in Georgia

The sound of the hunter's gun resounds on the hills. Millions of pigeons roost nightly at Oakland, and each train passing through Piedmont carries its quota of shot guns, which are almost a superfluity, as the birds are piled so thick on the elder bushes that after nightfall one can step up to them and catch and kill them as fast as necessary without mutilating them with shot. One gentleman from Westernport Tuesday morning killed eight hundred and thirty-three of the birds, many of which were taken without the aid of a gun. — Piedmont (W. Va.) Independent.

October 16, 1874. Acres of wild pigeons. Columbus Daily Enquirer 16(243): 2.

14 May 2014

Reports of Georgia Pigeon Roosts

Macon Telegraph: News has reached the city of an immense pigeon roost on the lower edge of Taylor county, where the droves of birds are so large that large limbs are frequently broken from the trees when they alight. A party of gentlemen from this city contemplate a visit to the roost, and should they go, expect great sport in engaging in a wholesale shooting of the feathered strangers. This is just the season of the year when the wild pigeons are returning from their southward migration and roosts are reported in several other portions of the state. In Macon county a roost has been established, and a day or two since a number of gentlemen went from Montezuma and Oglethorpe to it and killed a number of the birds. Millions are said to be there every night. Another roost is in the southwestern part of Talbot county and it is immense also in its proportions, extending over several acres. The favorite food of the birds is black jack masts, of which there is a good supply through the swamps this season of the year. The sportsmen of Talbot county have a lively fusillade at the birds every evening.

March 9, 1880. [Reports of Georgia pigeon roosts.] Atlanta Weekly Constitution 12(38): 3.

22 July 2013

Lines to a Red-Bird - A Poem from 1873

Little, bird, so full of gladness,
Singing sweetly in yon tree,
Naught to thee is known of sadness,
Thou a wild-wood warbler free.
 
Night but brings thee rest and slumber,
Sitting by thy russet mate,
Pleasures only without number,
Crown thee, birdie, soon or late.
 
While at heart I wear the willow,
Pretty bird I envy thee;
Tears bedew my nightly pillow,
Soothing sleep comes not to me.
 
Had I like thee bright pinions,
Soon I'd fly across the sea,
seeking in those far dominions
Balm to make this anguish flee.
 
I would seek no more the dwelling
where we first together met;
Then my heart with joy was swelling,
Now it feels but vain regret.
 
Birdie, hush thy joyous singing!
Sick my heart turns, at thy lay!
Go, sweet bird! thy bright form winging,
To some happier home — away!
Inez. June 20, 1873. Cuthbert Appeal 7(25): 2. Written for the Cuthbert Appeal.