How often have you heard the phrase "bird brain," a classic belittlement of avian mental abilities? The truth is that over the past five decades or so, studies of avian intelligence have shown that birds are much smarter than we thought.
How smart? Bird brains are very different from mammal brains, which led to the idea that birds simply lacked the equipment for thinking. However, beginning in the 1960s, bird researchers began noticing that birds are capable of astonishing feats of innovation, creating novel solutions to challenges in their lives.
How about the average chickadee, hiding thousands of bits of food around its territory each fall, creating a mental map that guides it to retrieve every bit over the winter? Or a red-tailed hawk riding an ice floe down an open river, then flying back up to do it again and again, just because it's fun?

No 'bird brains' here
Every day in many ways, birds demonstrate that they're brainy beings. Birds possess a navigation system that's better than any GPS device, as they make their long migrations. They're great problem solvers, especially in avoiding the many predators they encounter in a day. And some even use cunning: Blue jays hide nuts for later eating, but if the hiding jay discovers another jay was watching, it retrieves its nut to hide it out of sight.
Until about 50 years ago, we humans believed that birds are primarily instinctual creatures, more like flying robots than cognitive beings. But their amazing feats of navigation, quick thinking on the fly and even guile while stashing food are not the actions of animals ruled only by instructions hard-wired in their brains.
Instead, birds process masses of information with lightning speed as they move through their fast-paced lives. They learn and hone their knowledge and skills, adapting their behavior to new situations. This is a classic definition of intelligence, and yet in the past it has been hard for humans to grant that the birds around us are smart.
Birds do learn and they learn quickly. They have to, because flight brings them into new situations at an accelerated pace, much more so than mammals' slower, terrestrial lives do. As birds fly, even a short distance from bird feeder to tree, their brains are analyzing sensory inputs at a rapid rate as they scan for predators, gauge wind speed, measure the distance ahead, plan for landing, and much, much more.