A century ago, you would have been hard pressed to see Cardinals in the New York City region. They are a southern U.S. species who have moved north with the rising temperatures. They reached Long Island by the 1930s. This is a nice example of the way we think about the wild with our primate brains: what we see around us during our lives is what we suppose has always been the case and will always be the case, but this is only because our frame of reference is so terribly limited.
Note that the “Northern” in the common name is in relation to the Tropics, where vividly colored birds are the norm and there are many other kinds of cardinals. The word “cardinal,” both noun (the Catholic rank, color, type of number, etc.) and adjective (meaning important), can be traced quite far back, and is related to the Sanskrit word for springing, turning, leaping.
And here, days away from leaping, a brand new Cardinal we saw in a Columbia St. community garden last August.


Leave a comment