• Home
  • How We Work
  • Where We Work
  • News Room
  • About Us
  • My Nature Page

Postcard from the Field: Return to the Bayou by Tim Gallagher

 

Photo: Tim Gallagher. © Rachel Dickinson

Tim Gallagher
Photo © Rachel Dickinson
See a larger version of this photo

Photo: In the middle of the bayou, Tim Gallagher enjoys a sublime moment. © Bobby Harrison

In the middle of the bayou, Tim Gallagher enjoys a “sublime moment”
Photo © Bobby Harrison
See a larger version of this photo

About Tim Gallagher

Tim Gallagher is editor of Living Bird magazine, the flagship publication of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. He was one of the first three people to see the ivory-bill in Arkansas and is author of The Grail Bird (Houghton Mifflin, 2005), which chronicles his search for the bird across the South and its rediscovery in February 2005.

By Tim Gallagher
Editor, Living Bird Magazine
Cornell Lab of Ornithology

Return to the Bayou

Cache River National Wildlife Refuge, Arkansas
May 25, 2005

As we canoe deeper into the bayou, I am struck most by how dim the light is, even at midday. It’s a different world here — slower somehow, the air thick, warm, and moist. Rounding the bend, I see a cottonmouth coiled loosely atop a nearby log, just above water level. It doesn’t even raise its head to peer at us as we float past.

It is good to be here, good to be back in the swamp. This is my first time here since the big announcement on April 28, 2005, when we stood before an auditorium at the Department of the Interior and told the world that the ivory-billed woodpecker still lives. In some ways, it was anticlimactic. For Bobby Harrison and me, the big moment had taken place some 14 months earlier when an unmistakable ivory-bill flew past at close range in front of our canoe. I’ve replayed that memory a thousand times in my mind, but the thought still sends shivers up and down my spine.

And now Bobby and I are floating together again down the same stretch of bayou. Up ahead I see the familiar fallen cypress and the bent tupelo that the huge woodpecker flew past, and it all clicks into place. Of course, it’s much different now. The trees are leafed out — it was winter when we saw the ivory-bill — and the water level is much lower today, but I know I’ll always recognize this place. I can close my eyes anytime and see it.

As we move closer to the exact spot where the bird flew over, Bobby turns the stern of the canoe and we paddle toward the side. We step out as we did on February 27, 2004, and start walking through the mud and over fallen limbs, but we don’t have the sense of urgency we had then. We’re just quietly enjoying the swamp — having a “sublime moment” as Gene Sparling would say.

I wish Gene were here now. His sighting, just two weeks before ours, was what brought us to this lonely bayou. And somehow, miraculously, it had all panned out; we had seen an ivory-bill. We had checked so many credible sightings during the past few years. This had been the third report we’d checked in Arkansas alone. What were the odds that you could actually go out to a place where someone had seen an ivory-bill and see it yourself? Not very good. Even Gene has not seen an ivory-bill since his first glimpse.

After taking a few pictures of each other standing where we saw the ivory-bill, we load up the canoe and head downstream toward a raised area of land on the east side of the bayou where we always camped during our first season here. This swamp is still such a magic place to me, and I know it always will be.

For more information about the ivory-billed woodpecker:

  • Book Excerpt: The Grail Bird by Tim Gallagher
    Meet Tim Gallagher and members of the ivory-bill search team as they explore the Big Woods of Arkansas and see an ivory-billed woodpecker.
  • Found: The Ivory-billed Woodpecker
    Learn about the timeline of the search for the ivory-bill, The Nature Conservancy's conservation efforts in the Big Woods of Arkansas, meet the search team, and more!
  • Where We Work: The Nature Conservancy in Arkansas
    The Nature Conservancy's work in Arkansas helps protect and restore ecologically rich wetlands, threatened native prairies, caves, forests and waterways.
  • Places We Protect: The Big Woods of Arkansas
    This 550,000-acre corridor of floodplain forest follows the bayous and rivers that flow into the Mississippi River and includes the most extensive example of natural shoreline along the lower Mississippi. For 41 miles, the banks on both sides of the river are lined with bottomland hardwoods, the habitat of the ivory-billed woodpecker.
  • How You Can Help: Donate online
    Support our efforts to conserve this critical habitat for the ivory-bill and other species.
  • Ivory-billed Woodpecker News
    See ivory-billed woodpecker photos, maps of the habitat of the ivory-bill, and other news and information about the rediscovery of the ivory-billed woodpecker.