Ravens are, for me, the most fascinating of birds. The raven plays an important role in the Bible (Noah sent out a raven before he sent out a dove); it appears in many different cultural traditions, from Norse myth to Native American folklore; and it inspired one of the greatest American poems, Edgar Allan Poe's “The Raven” (1845). And if you want a thorough, scholarly look at the bird that ornithologists refer to by its scientific name of Corvus corax, then you may enjoy Bernd Heinrich’s 1989 book Ravens in Winter.
Heinrich, a professor at the University of Vermont, conducted his research for Ravens in Winter by repeatedly trekking to a remote Maine forest. There, he sought to draw scientifically-based conclusions regarding the phenomenon of raven “recruitment,” a practice whereby ravens seem to recruit one another to carcasses found in the wintertime.
Heinrich's dedication to his research is impressive, as he chronicles four years of wintertime observations in subzero temperatures, often from a blind or from an unheated cabin. He is systematic in his observations, and readers who do not share an appreciation for scientific method may find some parts of the book slow going.
But Heinrich's enthusiasm for his research is contagious, as when he describes a December 16 attempt to use recorded raven calls to see whether ravens “recruit” one another to a carcass through calls:
At 11:05 I hear raven calls from the woods. A good time to test the recruiting power of the yells again, so I play my tape for ten seconds. Magic! Within fifteen seconds five ravens swoop low over the cabin! But the birds don’t stay near the bait; they return to the woods, as if to hide. I play the tape three more times in the next two hours when I see no ravens near, and it attracts ravens every time. Sometimes I hear their metallic knocking calls from the woods. Why don’t they go down to feed? What in the devil is going on here now? (p. 100)
As Heinrich continues with his investigations, he develops a hypothesis that the phenomenon of raven “recruitment” has something to do with dominance patterns among male ravens. Dominance rituals and dominance displays, after all, exist among all species, and relate to the need for strong members of each species to find a strong and healthy mate with which to bear offspring and preserve the species.
In his wintertime observations, Heinrich found that typically mating-related dominance displays among ravens, like the fluffing of head feathers and the showing of a raven’s ears, were not related to the wish to mate. “[P]airs showed their ears only to strangers at the bait, and fluffed heads only to each other. The already mated pairs were showing off their dominance to the vagrants because they wanted them to leave, not because they were sexually attracted to them….At my baits…fluffing out of the head in the absence of sexual display was clearly a submissive gesture” (p. 201).
By the end of his investigation, Heinrich feels that he is moving closer to an answer to his research question: “I know I have a ‘program’ to decipher the privileged spectacle before me. I am at an arena where dominance is established and held, and where ultimate reproductive decisions are made. Hundreds of seemingly disparate details have now merged into one simple pattern in my mind” (pp. 300-01).
Anyone who works in academia will appreciate Heinrich’s dedication to and enthusiasm for his research – and anyone who has labored to get a paper accepted for and published in a scholarly journal will relate to Heinrich’s bemused recollection of how “The paper I wrote on my work over the last four winters has just appeared in Behavioral Ecology and Sociobiology. All of that work reduced to fourteen pages of text!” (p. 301). And yes, that’s how it feels sometimes.
I also like the way in which Heinrich combines his meticulously gathered and rigorously science-based research findings with invocations of raven mythology and accounts of social interaction with fellow researchers; all of these features of Ravens in Winter help to keep the book energetic and interesting. Even if you do not share my support of the NFL's Baltimore Ravens, you will enjoy Ravens in Winter if you appreciate the unique intelligence of ravens, or if you want an often poetic setting-forth of how very beautiful a bitterly cold winter can be.