Itâs a cold and damp December morning in the parking lot of the Kingston Point Rotary Park, a spit of land jutting out into the Hudson River in upstate New York. Itâs also 4 a.m., a waking hour usually reserved for long-haul truckers and graveyard-shift cops. Nevertheless, here stands Lili Taylor, the Emmy Awardânominated and critically acclaimed actor who, just a few days ago in Los Angeles, finished filming the third season of ABCâs American Crime. A member of the ĂÛèÖAPPâs Board of Directors since last June, Taylor may be jet-laggedâpuffy eyes and a nagging cough betray her. But she still chose the early shift on the annual Christmas Bird Count (CBC) for New Yorkâs Ulster and Dutchess counties, driving from her country home about 15 miles away, lured by the opportunity to find owls.
âO·É±ôŸ±ČÔČ” overwhelms me,â Taylor, 49, whispers. âItâs a needle in the haystack.â
As she will reveal during the next eight hours, Taylor has the keen eye of a birder. As a kid growing up in a Chicago suburb, she had the practice instilled in her by her nature-loving mother, and sheâs been honing her skill in earnest for the past seven years. Taylorâs interest in what she sees through her binoculars spills over to related issues, such as the effects of and urban sprawl on birds. Recently, she helped to research, design, and plant a bird-friendly garden at her 8-year-old daughterâs school, so that all the students there could learn why their feathered friends matter.
Today sheâs on one of 13 teams in the area that have mobilized for the CBC, a century-old, volunteer-run census that measures the health of birds across the Western Hemisphere. Some people participate in the count purely for recreational purposes, but many take part because the population data is valuable to scientific research and conservation work. Taylor seems to be motivated by the latter. She sticks close to her guide, Mark DeDea, peppering him with questions about certain speciesâ behavior and habitat. Sheâs a quick draw with her binoculars, too. Taylor has decided to stick it out until noon, halfway through the predawn-to-dusk endeavor. In total, the 13 squads will net 16,076 birds and 80 different speciesâsome of the lowest numbers on record for this CBC region.
But at the moment, she's fixated on seeing an owl, or at least, the haunting glint of oneâs eye. She stands a good chance with DeDea running point: Heâs a birder of 20 years, caretaker of a nature center, and a vault of knowledge about the local birds and where to best look for them. He sweeps his flashlight beam along a stand of cedars and other conifers about 30 yards away, hoping to detect a reflection. In the inky darkness, Taylor plants a boot on a crusty snow bank and cocks her head, listening intently. DeDea directs a small speaker wired to his cell phone at the copse of trees. The trill of an Eastern Screech-Owl slices through the wintry air.
But thatâs not the species that answers the call.
âGreat Horned!â Taylor whispers excitedly.
âYup,â says DeDea, pointing to his left. âHer nest is about a mile and a quarter in that direction.â
Seconds later, as DeDea waves his flashlight again, a screech-owl wails out. Both he and Taylor say they also detect the faint rustling of the birds flitting among the branches. âIâm kind of surprised they vocalized,â DeDea says. âThe sound of a Great Horned is enough to silence any bird that doesnât want to become a meal.â
âWaitâwhatâs that sound?â Taylor says, directing her gaze to the right just as DeDea points his flashlight there. âOh, a deer,â she says, sounding disappointed.
âGood ear, though,â DeDea says.
The gameâs only just begun.
The approaching sunrise adds a touch of color to the gray sky. Taylor and DeDeaâjoined at 7 a.m. by two other birders to comprise the full âSector Iâ teamâvisit about a dozen sites in and around Kingston over the next few hours. The habitats range from the Hudson River and its banks, where Buffleheads (3), American Black Ducks (9), Ring-billed Gulls (206), and Canada Geese (498, shocker), among others. In other areasâwoods with rocky trails, wetlands, scrubland abutting big-box-store parking lots, open fields with heavy clouds overheadâthey spot and record Red-tailed Hawks (9), Cooperâs Hawks (2), Downy, Red-bellied, and Hairy Woodpeckers (19, 16, and 3, respectively), Eastern Bluebirds (13), Yellow-rumped Warblers (2), American Goldfinches (12), and the somewhat rare Merlin (3).
DeDea admits to being slightly star-struck by Taylor, who has 30 years of professional acting credits, mostly in indie films (Mystic Pizza, 1988; I Shot Andy Warhol, 1996; The Notorious Bettie Page, 2005), as well as Broadway and television. In addition to her Emmy-winning role on American Crime, she has appeared in Gotham, Almost Human, and Six Feet Under.
DeDea and Taylor chat as they warm up in the car. âWe bird nerds crave to have someone of status we can point to and say, âSheâs a birder!â â he says.
âAwww, really?â she replies. âThatâs nice of you to say. I hope so.â
âI love it and want to get the word outâanything to get the word out,â Taylor, whoâs also on the board of the American Birding Association, goes on to say. âIâm into it. Birds are right in front of you. Theyâre important. You just have to open your eyes to see it.â
Once we arrive at the next stop, Taylor takes up her stance, binoculars at the ready. Her birding strategy starts with a kind of trance-like state. âYou just chill and look around,â she says. âYouâre not lasered-in. Itâs like a wide-angle view but with soft focus. The more relaxed the wide-angle is, the better. And then, if I detect any motion, I laser in and focus with my binoculars.â
Itâs a craft that overlaps with another one of Taylorâs niche interests: trapeze.
âBoth require proprioperception,â she says. âThe first time you do trapeze, you have no idea whatâs happening. You donât know where you are in space. The instructors are telling you to do things that are crazy. âLet go? Of the bar? No, thatâs crazy.â â
âBut as time goes by, you start to develop a different way of perceiving things. Now, Iâm starting to see thingsâan experienced flier sees everything in the eight seconds between leaving the board, performing an aerial maneuver, and landing. I can understand it now. Same with birding. My sound and visuals, through experience, have developed to the point where they work together in a new way.â
Stimuli aside, there's a more physical parallel between the two, a sensation that humans rarely get to experience: flying.
âAt first I didnât see a connection between birding and trapeze,â Taylor continues. âBut Iâve been working on what are called round-trips. You fly out, you get caught, you get the bar off of the catcher, and then you fly back to the board, so you never have to come down. It isnât such a mystery that I like birds and I like trapeze.â
Just before noon, Taylor sits in the back of DeDeaâs Subaru, gazing skyward through the window. She may be quiet and tired, but sheâs still alert.
âRaptor!â she says, rupturing the silence.
DeDea pulls over hastily and parks on the shoulder. He and Taylor climb out of the car and point their binoculars skyward.
âIs it a falcon?â Taylor asks DeDea.
âNope,â he says. âA Cooperâs Hawk.â
âAnd there are vultures up there, too,â Taylor says.
âGood eye, Lili,â DeDea says. âFour Black Vultures, to be precise. Those are really good for our count.â
Taylor and DeDea crane their necks and train their sights on the hawk. Itâs circling slowly, elegantly, 200 or 300 feet aloft.
In an instant the bird breaks into a blazing-fast free fall.
âOh, my, God,â Taylor says.
The little missile disappears below the treeline, presumably pouncing on something edibleâa rodent, perhapsâin the heavy underbrush.
âWell, that was certainly something,â Taylor says wryly. âThatâs it. Thatâs f-ing nature right there. I love it.â
Of course, DeDea loves it, too. But he uses one word to describe what just happened: âLunch.â
Correction: Taylor has been nominated for multiple Emmys, but hasn't won (yet). Her daughter is 8, not 13.