As I tiredly drove through the warm spring darkness up Evesham Avenue and turned into Camden Avenue toward home after the trial, I saw the distinct outline of a quail in the middle of the street in front of me, and I heard a bird sound I hadn't heard in 40 years ... "There's Bob White; There's Bob White ..." The bobwhite quail call.
Back around the early 1960s, each Summer, I and my brothers and sisters would sometimes spend about two weeks on the farm of our grandparents in Evesboro, now part of Evesham Township. The farm was about 7 acres on what was then called Hog Pond Road, now North Elmwood Road between Church Road and Medford-Evesboro Road. I used to enjoy getting up in the wee hours of the morning at the farm, opening the bedroom window, and listening to the sounds of the rural dawn. At a particular point I told my grandmother that I liked to hear the lonely whistle of a bird I heard every morning at the same time -- three tones, "peep, peep, PEEP! Peep, peep, PEEP!"
"Oh," Grandmom said, "That's the bobwhite. It's a quail that lives around here. It's called a 'bobwhite' because when it peeps, it sounds like its saying, 'There's Bob White! There's Bob White!'"
Grandmom's explanation stuck with me. And so I was all the more amazed to hear the bobwhite's dawn call to me that morning in much-more-urban Magnolia.
I let the bobwhite cross the street in front of my car, and went home.
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