The Ruffed Grouse s Mysterious Crazy Flight

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It's been a while since I've lived in an area that had grouse in enough numbers that I could observe this taking place but yeah it's a real thing.


RUFFED GROUSE HUNTING

The Ruffed Grouse’s Mysterious “Crazy Flight”

AUGUST 2, 2022

A ruffed grouse taking flight

A.J. DEROSA
A.J. DeRosa founded Project Upland in 2014 as an excuse…

Exploring the Ruffed Grouse behavior enigma of crazy flight through history and science
It was late September, the Minnesotan air was cool, and Ruffed Grouse were on my mind. We had just thrown our hunting gear in the back of the pickup, ready to head out for a day of chasing dogs through grouse cover, when my cell phone began to vibrate. Normally, I would let it go to voicemail. However, having only just walked out of the camp, my fiancée calling would have meaning.

“A grouse just flew through the window and landed on the bed,” Sabrina said with a mix of shock and nervous laughter.


“What?” I responded.

Slower and more pronounced, she said, “A grouse flew through the window and landed on the bed.”

I hung up the phone with slight confusion on my face and turned to my companions. “I need to walk back up to camp,” I told them.

When I arrived at the scene of the incident, it was very much as described. A young grouse had flown through a second story window and landed on the bed in front of our dog, Marty. Despite being a 15-pound, non-hunting dog, it was known that day forward that Marty’s Ruffed Grouse hunting skills were unrivaled.

This is not the first time I saw this happen. And believe it or not, the behavior has an actual name: crazy flight. Written references can be found going back to the turn of the century in anything from hunting classics to ornithology books.

Marty with his Crazy Flight ruffed grouse

What is Crazy Flight?
Crazy flight is when a Ruffed Grouse flies at top speeds for great distances. It occurs specifically around summer’s transition into autumn, right as leaves begin to fall. First-year grouse in particular exhibit this behavior. Grouse can be seen making huge flights across highways, big open fields, and even into metropolitan areas like New York City. During many of these events, these birds end up going headfirst into windows, a threat to birds in general. However, this specific behavior and the speed associated with it make it both deadly and destructive.

Victor C. Friesen wrote of The Crazy Flight Phenomenon of the Ruffed Grouse in Volume 29, Number 03 of the print Canadian journal “The Blue Jay.” He pointed to a reference by John Audubon himself in 1820 that described the behavior as “partial sorties.”



William Harden Foster, famous painter and Ruffed Grouse hunter, referred to it as the “crazy” season. He wrote, “Few writers on the ruffed grouse fail to recognize and make note of the bird’s so-called crazy season. This is supposed to be a time in the autumn when grouse begin dashing hither and yon, and often end up by driving blindly into buildings, wire lines, or other obstructions. Some old gunners who were never especially impressed by this ‘crazy’ season theory believed that the grouse becomes unnaturally nervous while the autumn leaves are showering down and will do extraordinary things while thus temporarily agitated.”

Foster described each side of the debate as to why the crazy flight occurs nearly 100 years ago. Believe it or not, that debate has raged on. While it has not technically been solved, the scientific community has some much more grounded and widely accepted concepts.

Why do Ruffed Grouse commit to crazy flight?

Fear may be a driving factor for crazy flight. Ruffed Grouse, when pursued by predators, will fly hard and fast, sometimes for great distances. Birds of prey can drive them an even greater distance with a more erratic flight. However, this is a year-long behavioral response.

Foster did not believe that something as simple as leaves falling to the ground caused birds to commit such a rash act. “It can hardly be accepted as reasonable that a race of birds that has lived in a land of falling leaves from time immemorial should develop an annual panic when other natural phenomena such as thunderstorms, hail, or heavy snows fail to produce any sort of nervous upset,” he wrote.

One of the more interesting concepts was noted by Friesen in 1925 in a study that found seven out of 10 Ruffed Grouse died as a result of crazy flight also had stomach worms. In 1947, “A ruffed grouse marked by attaching a bell to its wing was found later with a broken neck, having flown against a tree,” wrote Friesan. “The suggestion was that the bird, irritated by the bell, responded similar to a bird irritated by a parasite.”

Later studies found a lack of stomach worms. In 1927, another theory was that Ruffed Grouse “inherited the instinct of migration.” (Friesen 1971) By 1948, that was debunked by studies noting no pattern in the direction in which these crazy flight birds were headed.

Food as a topic has also been cited as a potential cause of crazy flight. A very specific claim was made around “moldy and fermented rose hips.” As Friesen points out, a decade long study by the state of New York eliminated rose hips as a significant Ruffed Grouse food.

Maybe slightly more unusual, but more widely accepted, is an idea around a Ruffed Grouse’s urge for certain foods. Foster wrote on this idea,

“The logical answer to why grouse move considerable distances is because of their quest of food. A grouse eats about everything from grasshoppers to acorns and one ornithology lists one hundred and sixteen known items of grouse diet to which several more might be added. The strange part of it is that the grouse is a decided gourmet. It will apparently pass by quantities of food that is known to be a part of its diet and go long distances for some other item.”

Foster’s interest in the subject was about how grouse can seemingly vanish from areas that normally hold grouse, even with food present, causing frustration for the “novice gunner.”

In John Audubon’s research, 50,000 Ruffed Grouse flushes were observed and resulted in only six accidental deaths. This is testament to any grouse hunter’s knowledge of how Ruffed Grouse can fly through thick cover, dodging the best grouse shooting techniques.

The theories on crazy flight have certainly added to its mystery.

Why Did a Grouse Fly Through My Window? – Current Science
The most important clues to the theory of crazy flight have to do with both the age of the birds and the time of year. This time of year is when broods break up, resulting in younger birds finding a new home turf.

Friesen wrote,

“Edminster (1947) provides us with one of the most detailed explanations of the crazy flight phenomenon. Young Ruffed Grouse become quarrelsome as they attain ###ual maturity in fall. A bird may be driven away by a member of its own brood, and its flight may be reckless as it seeks to flee its tormentor. This bird must find a territory elsewhere, but it may encounter further hostility from other grouse already established there. With continued harassment, the grouse will become ‘more nervous’ and ‘more desperate’ because of its ‘growing inferiority complex.’ It will thus fly out of its normal habitat, and on occasions, fly against objects in those un- familiar surroundings.”


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The Connecticut Department of Energy and Environmental Protection concurs with the idea saying, “In early fall, many grouse exhibit a dispersal behavior commonly referred to as ‘crazy flight.’ At this time of year, grouse are often seen in unusual habitats or are victims of collisions with trees, cars, or houses, etc. This strong urge to disperse is largely exhibited by young birds, whereas adults tend to remain within the previous year’s home range.”

Does Crazy Flight Have a Significance to Grouse Hunting?
While the mystery of the Ruffed Grouse’s crazy flight has untangled over the centuries, the truth is that its significance to hunting Ruffed Grouse is only minor. This is because the days of early September grouse seasons ended with the market hunting era. Much as we mark the coming of Blue Jays to signal the arrival of migrating woodcock, one could derive the evidence that broods are breaking up when crazy flights begin. Although, unlike the American woodcock, it’s probably before the season opens. Most states have designed their hunting season to not overlap with brooding behavior as to limit the vulnerability of a bird exhibiting such behavior when encountered by a grouse hunter.

Foster talked about this in his classic New England Grouse Shooting,

“The gunner of the earlier period started in on the first of September when the young birds were still in flocks. The country gunner knew where many of these used to start sixty or seventy pa’tridges in a day; he may be remembering those early-season trips when he went from one to another of these spotted broods. To start six or eight of them on a certain well-remembered day would not be at all improbable. This might well mean sixty or seventy different birds if the flocks ran large. But the same gunner, on the same year, didn’t move those sixty birds after the middle of October… Today our open seasons do not begin until after the birds are scattered and the seasons are much shorter.”

I will never forget the day of Marty’s great hunt from his bed, shattered glass spread across our bags and clothes. His hunt piqued my interest in asking, why would a grouse do this? It brought me on an incredible 200-year journey featuring iconic people, unique ideas, and an amazing history of observing the Ruffed Grouse behavior called “crazy flight.”

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A.J. DEROSA



A.J. DeRosa founded Project Upland in 2014 as an excuse to go hunting more often (and it worked). A New England native, he grew up hunting and has spent over 35 years in pursuit of big and small game species across three continents. He has a passion for side-by-side shotguns, inspiring him to travel the world to meet the people and places from which they come. Looking to turn his passion into inspiration for others, AJ was first published in 2004 and went on to write his first book The Urban Deer Complex in 2014. He soon discovered a love for filmmaking, particularly the challenge of capturing ruffed grouse with a camera, which led to the award-winning Project Upland film series. AJ's love for all things wild has caused him to advocate on the federal and state levels to promote and expand conservation policy, habitat funding, and upland game bird awareness. He currently serves as the Strafford County New Hampshire Fish & Game Commissioner in order to give back to his community and to further the mission of the agency. When those hunting excuses are in play, you can find him wandering behind his Wirehaired Pointing Griffon in the mountains of New England and anywhere else the birds take them.

https://projectupland.com/grouse-sp...y-flight/?mc_cid=cdcd51a4d7&mc_eid=d1c94caa05
 
Back in the 70s we had a grouse fly through our front window. We weren't home at the time but when we got back, there was the dead grouse laying on the couch. Amazing how much damage that little bird could do. 3 layers of glass, a glass covering on a photo and blood on the couch. Not to mention the glass in the carpet.
 
There is a flock of grouse out at camp. Started as a full brood of 8 but 2 got hit by a car a couple weeks back. Saw 5 of them yesterday and they are still together but no crazy flights there. Had to get out of the truck and shoo them off the road. Even though I was a couple feet from them, none chose to fly, and simply ran for the tall grass at roadside. The dispersal/new territoty theory seems to be about the most plausible. This is how you see lone grouse in weird locations occasionally as the try to expand the territory.
 
I was driving a secondary country highway one time, must have in been early September, when a ruffie burst out of the trees and made a perfect curved trajectory flight smack into the top corner of my windshield. No damage to the vehicle, just a few downy feathers pasted to the glass, but it must have been fatal to the grouse. I considered stopping and picking up a free grouse dinner but the season hadn't opened and I'd been warned that the local game wardens would hit people hard who tried to pick up road kill for the sake of the fur, so I just kept going and a fox or whatever got the tasty meal instead.
 
As said above, I think the dispersal theory holds the most water. As a generally sedentary bird, there would be a lot of inbreeding if there wasn't significant dispersal. Possibly just an internal drive to go on a long flight to anywhere in the first autumn of life. Many will die or end up in very strange places but overall a good thing for those that make it.
 
I encountered the crazy-flight only once while driving the highway near Slave Lake. The bird was 80 to 100 metres above the ground and moving fast. It took a few minutes to realize it was a ruffie. Once we knew what we were looking at, we slowed a bit to stay in line with its flight. It paralleled us on the highway for about 5 or 6 kilometres before it veered off. The sighting seemed so bizarre.
 
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I've been posted up on a cut line behind rockey mountain house at 05:00 hunting deer. Had a flock of 30 to 40 come threw. The sound was terrifying loud as they got closer and closer. Smacking the branches as the flow by..
Definitely used the terrains elevation drop to maintain speed
 
All birds are susceptible to flying into windows, depending on what the reflection is doing. So I do not think that is a "crazy flight" as described in the anecdote in the OP story.

Birds getting drunk on fermented fruits and berries is a real thing. Fermentation (producing alcohol) usually happens in the spring when the fruits still on the tree or shrubs have had enough time to die and then the sugars ferment. The OP anecdote was cited as early fall, so unlikely alcohol was involved (for the grouse, anyways :) )

I think the dispersion flight is a very good hypothesis, especially for males which will have to establish their own breeding territories in the spring, and by the time spring arrives it might be too late with the competition, so best get at exploring as soon as possible.

Hawks and owls hanging around will also get the birds spooked and may trigger an escape "crazy" flight to get way the heck away from the hawk really fast.

Interestingly, some songbirds will focus on the hawk and move towards it to keep it in sight and monitor it. The little songbirds are very fast and dekey, and can escape, so it pays them to keep eyes on the threat. I do not think a grouse can out-deke a big forest hawk (Goshawk, Coopers hawk), so once detected, a grouse is in big trouble.

I once experienced a chase of a Copper's hawk chasing a robin in the forest: I saw them flying under the canopy for some distance, zigging and zagging, when they suddenly turned and both flew within inches of my face and I felt the force of the wingbeat blast of air on my face. They were oblivious to my presence and focused on business. Their speed and agility inside the forest with all its complex 3-D structure was truly amazing - incredible reflexes.
 
Grouse through a window is really only part of the fall 'crazy flight' if the house is in an unusual location for grouse to be in... middle of a huge field, in town, that sort of thing. I live in the woods with ruffies all around and used to get several window-killed grouse a year (despite hanging various obstacles) until I coated the offending windows with a covering guaranteed to prevent bird collisions https://www.collidescape.org/ it works!
 
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