The 2019 Polar Vortex slid down from the North Pole, threatening to lock Chicago into subzero stillness. I prepared for the warring cold by teeing up the entire 18-hour series of The Marvelous Mrs. Mazel. Then I threw stale bread crumbs onto my balcony to nourish the house sparrows, finches, and chickadees before they huddled together in eaves and cracked soffits to wait it out. I shuttered in and Dapped all the little crevices around the balcony door that were spritzing air into my not-so-insulated living room. That was the extent of my preparation for the coldest two days ever recorded in Chicago.
Day one brought minus 23 degrees. I woke to a thick film of silver ice covering all the windows. The ice curtain obscured the humanity moving around behind the windows across the street and any fool pedestrian walking in the feels-like-minus 40.
My binge-watching was interrupted mid-morning by a thrashing whomp, whomp whomp on the concealed balcony. I inched toward a clearing in the frosty glass.
A murder of crows had come to forage.
The much-studied American Black Crow might be the most intelligent animal other than primates. They hide their food and come back for it. If a crow looks you in the eye, she will remember you, follow you down the street, and caw at you for attention like a wild pet.
On day two, the temperature was 21 degrees below. The ice wall on my windows melted enough for a small lookout. I abandoned Mrs. Mazel and placed a chair well away from the clearing to observe the crows without startling them. They first landed in late morning. A mighty set of black wings fluttered a plumped-up body onto the balcony railing, and the rest followed—a family of five dipping to the balcony floor for leftovers. They flew off and came back. Again. And again. And again. I remained still throughout, trying to lock eyes with the birds. In the afternoon, the weather broke and allowed the dog and me to walk outside—under the watchful eyes of noisy new friends.
The first cold days of 2023 were predicted for the weekend after Thanksgiving. Though nowhere near the 2019 plunge, 30-degree temperatures heightened awareness of asylum-seeking families living on cardboard slabs outside police stations. I sought diversion through another favorite TV series, Julia.
The TV automatically tuned in CNN, though, where there was live coverage of the hostages being released from Gaza. A mysterious and curious need for every scrap of information gripped me. Who are they? What are their stories? Where are they going? I saw six women over the age of 70. One 85-year-old was helped onto a bus. I winced, feeling my own arthritic pain. Four children appeared—ages 2, 4, 5, and 9. I squinted to see if they were clutching teddy bears.
After watching for two tearful days, unrelenting shivers overcame me. And when I took the dog for a walk, that murder of crows cawed to us from the barren trees.
I do love crows. Some years ago on summer mornings I kept hearing something hit the roof of our house here in Long Beach, Indiana. I went out to find a crow picking up a stone,, flying up over the house and dropping the stone. The crow would do this over and over until I went out and yelled at her. “Hey, cut it out.” Only then would she stop. Since then I always say hello the crows when they’re near me.
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Wonder what goes on there. Crows do that with nuts to crack them open. But rocks?
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Crows are like people I think. They wanted my attention. And it worked.
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Dear God… that sound painfully cold. It’s wonderful how you evoke the feeling of hibernation – of cocoon – and then the crow peering. Excellent. It’s dark dank dark here. I think about Herb a lot and wonder how he wd feel that his best friend is a MAGA Trumper.
Vivienne de Courcy
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I was fortunate enough to be away from Chicago during that deep freeze ….and I also love watching the sleek smart crows.. Stay warm this winter..no matter the frosty windows… Denise
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Wonderful essay! We have similar tastes in tv series and I would also recommend The Gilded Age on Max if you enjoyed Downton Abbey! Jackie Brandstein >
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I
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