Editor鈥檚 note: Iconic Welsh artist Ralph Steadman illustrated the Maui parrotbill for our special multimedia project on the plight of the kiwikiu. Here’s how that came about.
Weird is the word that Hanna Mounce uses to describe the critically endangered Maui parrotbill, or kiwikiu.
鈥淭he fact that they stay together in a pair year-round 鈥 weird,鈥 says Mounce, who leads the . 鈥淭he fact that they lay one egg 鈥 weird. The fact that their chicks stay with them for up to 18 months 鈥 not a typical songbird.鈥
Her comments stuck with me when I returned to Honolulu after a 10-day stint in the woods with Mounce and a team of biologists trying to save the species from extinction.
The word 鈥渨eird,鈥 in particular, kept rattling around in my brain. And there are exactly two people who come to mind when I think of weird.
, the late gonzo journalist who wrote about being 鈥渢oo weird to live, and too rare to die,鈥 and , a Welsh artist whose own illustrated memoir of sorts is titled 鈥淧roud Too Be Weirrd.鈥 He first partnered with Thompson in 1970 to cover the Kentucky Derby and went on to do the iconic art for 鈥淔ear and Loathing in Las Vegas,鈥 鈥淭he Curse of Lono鈥 and other strange sagas.
Several years ago, Steadman turned his focus to endangered and extinct birds while working on books with English author-filmmaker Ceri Levy. I鈥檝e lugged my coffee table-sized copy of their first foray, 鈥淓xtinct Boids,鈥 to the last five places I鈥檝e lived.
Its illustrations and accompanying dialogue feature many Hawaii birds that have gone extinct. The Lanai hookbill, the Bishop鈥檚 oo, the greater koa finch, the Kona grosbeak, the Hawaii mamo.
It also includes Steadman鈥檚 renditions of several still clinging to their existence here in the islands. The apapane, the iiwi, the amakihi, the alauahio, the akohekohe.
But no kiwikiu. That is, until now.
I fired off a long-shot email to Steadman last month, explaining that I was working on a multimedia piece about the work biologists are doing to save this species from extinction.
Might a new piece by the famed artist help draw the public鈥檚 attention to the plight of the Maui parrotbill?
To my surprise, I heard back within 24 hours from his daughter Sadie Williams, who manages his vast art collection, and Levy. We set up a Skype call between England and Oahu and chatted about the project as well as their latest enterprise, , which is about adapting conservation into your daily life.
Levy and Steadman invented the word in 2017 in their last book, 鈥淐ritical Critters,鈥 which is about the world鈥檚 endangered animals.
Here鈥檚 how they define it:
驳辞苍路锄辞路惫补路迟颈辞苍
- alternative conservation through the act of gonzovating and exhibiting compassion for the natural world.
- the protection, preservation, management, or restoration of wildlife and of natural resources to include forests, earth and water.
驳辞苍路锄辞路惫补路迟颈辞苍路ist
- an alternative conservationist.
- a person who makes sense from the nonsense.
Levy and Steadman are asking folks to , a pledge to stand up for the natural world by taking action big and small. Cleaning up litter. Planting flowers. Volunteering at a nature reserve.
Basically, they are asking people to do anything more than just 鈥渢icking a like box on social media.鈥 That, they say, is not gonzovation but a dereliction of duty.
I sent my initial email on a Wednesday. By Monday, Sadie had sent me Ralph鈥檚 first-of-its-kind kiwikiu, describing it as a 鈥渧ery endearing little chap.鈥
鈥淪erendipity is frequently the architect of our gonzovationist work and we have to be ready to spring into action when situations appear out of the blue,鈥 Ceri says. 鈥淭his is an opportunity for us to get back in the bird game.鈥
Here鈥檚 Ceri鈥檚 account of the chat he and Sadie had with Ralph about this project.
Ceri: Hey Ralph, there鈥檚 a bird we need to cover that we didn鈥檛 talk about previously. It鈥檚 the Maui Parrotbill or to give it its Hawaiian name, which it was only given in 2010, the Kiwikiu.
Ralph: If it鈥檚 a Kiwi, has it travelled from New Zealand?
Ceri: No! It鈥檚 a Kiwikiu 鈥 It鈥檚 from Hawaii. It鈥檚 a honeycreeper and we have previously depicted several Hawaiian birds including honeycreepers. If you remember we got in a tangle as to whether certain birds were alive or extinct. We got very confused.
Ralph: Yes, we went all confused.com. Hawaii? Last time I was there I covered the Honolulu Marathon with Hunter for what would become The Curse of Lono. It was chaos. True Gonzo. I remember Hunter and myself running the first three miles of the race and then a truck picked us up and took us the rest of the way to the bottom of Heartbreak Hill and there we got off and got ourselves into a position where the runners came past us after running twenty miles and while holding drinks in our hands we shouted at them, 鈥淩un, you bastards, run!鈥 Breathless runners were hurling abuse back at us and accused us of being non-sporting! Perhaps I should feel a little guilty, so if there鈥檚 something we can do to help them over there …
Sadie: So this is your chance to make amends to the good folk of Hawaii. Draw the Kiwikiu! Cue the Kiwikiu 鈥
Ralph: Righto, I鈥檒l get right on to it. Now where鈥檚 me yellah ink?
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About the Author
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .