But naturalist and prolific flora and fauna author Sally Roth has schooled me again in An Eye on the Sparrow: The Bird Lover's Bible. I had no idea that the Middle East was such a huge natural migratory bird flyway, and that thousands of quail falling from the sky is not fanciful at all. Take the massive annual quail migration from Europe and Eurasia to Africa, combined with a bad storm to blot out the stars which help the birds navigate and throw in some nasty winds... that well-timed feast during the Exodus was entirely plausible, Roth says. As for the ravens, Roth points out that all corvids are well-known for their social behavior with each other and with humans, and that they are intelligent enough to quickly determine friend from foe. Did the raven help feed Elijah, or did they just simply trust each other and decide to share the same spring? It was, after all, the only water source around for hundreds of miles. Either way, Roth says that story makes sense too. In An Eye on the Sparrow Roth opens up a detailed dialogue that Christians, atheists, naturalists, ornithologists and anyone interested in the natural world can all share and discuss. She covers the natural behavior of every bird that makes an appearance in the Bible in great scientific and behavioral detail, but with a friendly tone that's never preachy. "This isn't a religious book," Roth told me. "It's a bird book." I asked Roth what her favorite bird of the Bible was, and there's no surprise it's the sparrow (English sparrow or house sparrow, Passer Domesticus ). "Sparrows are not English, they originated in Europe and Asia but were introduced by humans all over the world because they adapt to living with us so easily," Roth told me. "Many people don't like them, though. They arrive in huge numbers and eat all your expensive bird food, they're not very colorful and they make messy nests. But I'm always in favor of the underdog, and sparrows were the only birds willing to live in the city smog of the Industrial Revolution. Sparrows can thrive almost anywhere." As for her favorite Bible verse, Roth cites Psalm 102.6.
"I am like a pelican of the wilderness, a mournful and even hideous object, the very image of desolation."
I was never able to figure that verse out until now, despite my extensive experience with hungry pelicans following my boat on lakes and stealing live fish right off my line. It turns out that pelicans are quite at home on lakes, but if you find one in the wilderness it is having a very, very bad day.



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