Birds Perched on Gravestones

Blue Jay
Life is but a stopping place, a pause in what's to be, 
A resting place along the road to sweet eternity. 
We all have different journeys, different paths along the way. 
To learn some things, but never meant to stay.
   -Author unknown

The Old Burying Ground in Beaufort, North Carolina, was established more than 300 years ago to be the final resting place for town residents. Now it’s a local landmark that has become home to many different birds. It’s my favorite place to explore with a camera!

There is something intriguing about seeing a vibrant, active bird, perched momentarily on an ancient gravestone. Such a solid, sturdy structure inevitably catches the eye of a bird in flight or perhaps from a perch high in the trees. It offers an inviting landing site close to the ground, where food is abundant.

“Rest O weary traveler…”

The Gray Catbird (above) has chosen this particular gravestone as a resting place. How can you tell? He’s standing on one leg only. He has tucked the other leg up into the body feathers, thereby assuming a resting position. At least one leg gets a rest from a long day of standing. I admire how birds are able to stand on a single leg for long periods of time, even overnight, without losing their balance! Here are two others at rest…

Flat-topped gravestones make excellent perches, as demonstrated by a variety of bird species…

An arched or gently curving surface seems to be equally appealing as a perch.

I have observed that any gravestone, whether curved or flat, simple or ornate, sculpted or pointed, is a potential perch. The shape of the surface seems to have little effect on a bird’s decision about where to land. There are so many choices…

The graveyard is a study in contrasts!

My eye is attracted to the contrasts I see through the lens as I compose a photograph. There’s the soft warmth of a living creature paired with the cold hardness of stone…

There’s the delicate lightness of a small winged animal compared to the grounded heaviness of gravestones…

There’s the transitory pause in movement versus the unchanging permanence of a grave marker…

There’s the bird’s colorful plumage opposed to the drab grayness of granite…

There’s the contrast between this present moment in our lives versus the memorialized past recorded in stone…

The unexpected can happen…

So far, only two birds have surprised me, when I encountered them on gravestones. Both birds normally stay high up in the trees, making the unusual decision to descend for some unknown reason — a woodpecker and an owl.

Great Horned Owl on a gravestone

I always wonder why birds stay in the same place when they can fly anywhere on the earth. Then I ask myself the same question. 

Harun Yahya

Want to read more about these graveyard birds? Select from these…

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