The DMZ's Thriving Resident: The Crane
Rare cranes have flourished in the world's unlikeliest sanctuary, the heavily mined demilitarized zone between North and South Korea
- By Eric Wagner
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2011, Subscribe
Choi Jong Soo and I are driving down a two-lane highway surrounded by rice fields, acres and acres of them, lying fallow for the winter. A few miles in the distance are mountains that seem too steep and jagged for their modest heights. We pass checkpoints, roadblocks. Heavily armed soldiers eye us from small huts. Every so often, helicopters sweep overhead. We are in the Cheorwon Basin, a little more than two hours northeast of Seoul, South Korea, and less than one mile from the Demilitarized Zone, or DMZ, the 2.5-mile-wide no man’s land that separates North and South Korea. Choi, my guide, nods at the mountains. “North Korea,” he says. “Very close.”
A couple of weeks before I arrived, North Korean forces had shelled Yeonpyeong Island, off the west coast of the Korean peninsula. Two South Korean marines and two civilians were killed—the first civilian deaths in decades. The Korean War began in 1950 when the United Nations and the United States helped the South repel an invasion from the North. At least three million died, including 58,220 Americans. The 1953 armistice brought an uneasy end to hostilities, but the two countries never signed a peace treaty and are still technically at war. Many South Koreans with whom I’ve spoken seem to have taken the latest developments in stride. For them, North Korea is like a fault, or a volcano, or some other intermittent, potentially cataclysmic phenomenon over which they have no control. I, however, am a little on edge.
Choi and I turn onto a dirt road and are soon navigating the maze of narrow, rutted dikes that demarcate the fields. The SUV bucks and heaves; flocks of mallards and white-fronted geese flurry into the air. Suddenly, Choi points out my window and exclaims, “Turumi!” I look but see nothing. He gestures more emphatically, so I take another look. Straining, and then pulling out my binoculars, I see two—no, three—white dots about half a mile away. They are red-crowned cranes, two adults and a chick, foraging among ordered bristles of rice stalks. I glance back at Choi and shake my head. How did he see them so far away? He grins. “Soldier’s eyes,” he says.
Twenty years ago he was a captain in the South Korean Army, stationed in a fishing port near the border. He was on watch one morning, he says through an interpreter, when he saw an enormous white bird fly overhead. He thought it was the most beautiful thing he had ever seen. It was a red-crowned crane, and he resolved to learn everything he could about it. Today he works for the Korean Society to Protect Birds.
Choi does regular surveys of the two crane species—the red-crowned and the white-naped—that winter here in the Cheorwon Basin. Every morning at 5:00, he drives out to these fields to count all the crane families he can find and spread out grain for them. Each family consists of two adults—they may mate for life and can live more than 25 years—and one or two chicks, which stay with their parents for about three months.
The rest of the year, Choi works with local farmers, teaching them about the birds and how to protect them. Sometimes he helps the farmers harvest crops. In exchange, he asks them to leave their fields unplowed so that cranes will have more waste rice to forage on come winter.
Whenever we approach a flock of cranes, Choi says, “Gwen-cha-no, gwen-cha-no.” You’re OK, you’re OK. If the cranes leap away in flight, he calls, “Mi-an-he, mi-an-he!” Sorry, sorry! Once, we saw 15 cranes feeding. We rolled slowly toward them. They leaned into the wind, their necks stiff, prepared to flee. We stopped, and Choi hunched down behind the steering wheel. The cranes relaxed. Choi exhaled slowly. Then two helicopters burst out from behind a hillside, and the cranes vaulted away.
The red-crowned crane is one of the rarest birds in the world; fewer than 3,000 survive in the wild. (The whooping crane, in North America, is even more rare, with 382 in the wild.) It has two main populations. One lives year-round on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido. Thousands of people visit special feeding stations each winter—high courtship season—to watch the birds call and leap and dance in the snow.
The other population breeds in the wetlands of the Amur and Ussuri rivers in southeast Russia and northern China. These birds migrate to coastal areas in China’s Jiangsu Province or to the Korean peninsula. Scientists assume this population fared poorly during World War II and the Korean War, given that cranes favor large, open, quiet spaces.
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Comments (4)
The article on Korea was of interest to me as a Veteran of the Korean war. My time there was August 1951 to December 1951. The DMZ was known as the MLR or Main Line of Resistance. I knew it was 150 miles long, 154 according to the article. I did not know how wide it was, I now know it is 2.5 miles. A million land mines are mentioned. That was my Platoon's job, but not mine, I was the platoon medic. I went with the Engineers that laid new mines and probed for enemy land mines. They used electronic mine detectors to find enemy mines. Sometimes their were to much shrapnel on the ground which made the detectors useless. The Engineers would then crawl on their hands and knees and probe the ground with their bayonets. Today if a barb wire fence is found don't be to sure it belonged to a farmer. Every personnel land mine field the Engineers laid was surrounded by a strand of Barb wire with signs attached saying MINE FIELD in three languages. The Infantry had concertina wire in front of their bunkers. Probably booby trapped with a hand grenade or some other explosive.
I have often wondered how or who removed all those land mines. I now know they didn't. That was 60 years ago, I now wonder if any are still explodeable? The DMZ or MLR is still a dangerous place. The story said that Bear,Deer and other wild life roamed the DMZ. I wonder if a large animal would trip a mine and cause the Soldiers on both sides much alarm.
Don Degood
Marysville Ohio
CO.B 1st platoon
8th Engineers C
1st Cav. Div
Posted by Don Degood on May 5,2011 | 08:18 PM
The cranes are magnificent creations.
Your magazine is among the best intellectually stimulating magazines on earth.
Continued success.
Jeff Fenner
Posted by Jeff Fenner on April 14,2011 | 07:05 PM
I love our Sandhill Cranes we have here in Longwood, FL and seeing these beautiful birds/cranes is a privilege. It's good to see they are making a come back back since WWII. May we people on Earth protect these beautiful birds.
Posted by Deb G. on April 4,2011 | 05:11 PM
Wonderful article!
Posted by Eleanor on March 23,2011 | 05:11 PM