Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 20, 1954
I Was Robbed!
By John R. Rowley, Ranger Naturalist
Unable as I am to understand the Clark
nutcracker's grating vocal repertory, this story is subject to certain
inaccuracy.

Nutcracker on white-bark pine
From Kodachrome by Welles & Welles
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You see, a Clark nutcracker of
unquestioned sobriety was struggling with a white-bark pine cone located
at the tip of a particularly flexible limb. On one occasion, this large
grizzled bird was thrown almost upside-down as he was grasping the tough
cone with both feet and prying with his crowbar-like bill in an effort
to dislodge the seeds of this unwieldy cone.
Whoops! -- then it happened. The cone
fell loose from the branch. The Clark nutcracker struggled for an
instant in regaining his composure before gliding down after the escaped
cone.
At this point, the "villain," who had
watched the procedure with apparent detachment, entered the stage.
Nutcracker number two was first to reach the now more stable cone and
continued with the job of gouging seeds from under the scales.
The first bird, with savoir faire,
withdrew to a lower and sturdier branch, fluffed its feathers, and gazed
into space with an appearance of complete unconcern.