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Take the piliated woodpecker, for instance. My grandparents instilled within my mom the importance of any sighting of this particular bird – it’s a very big deal, apparently. I can still remember the first time one of them said something about spying one of these members of the woodpecker family, talking in an excited, awestruck tone that suggested they’d just seen Elvis picking up groceries at the corner store –
Them: Guess what I saw today? A piliated woodpecker!
Me: A who-see-what-now?
Them: A piliated woodpecker! They’re as rare as spotting a Studebaker on the highway!
Me: What’s a Studebaker?
Of course, now I’m completely educated on the fact that piliated woodpeckers AND Studebakers
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But back to the phoebes – the nest has been on my porch for several years, and at least three or four times a year, a phoebe will lay eggs in the nest (I don’t know if it’s the same phoebe or different ones each time… if it’s the same phoebe, it must be one TIRED bird…). And I can watch through my porch window as the bird sits on the nest, then, once the eggs have hatched, she flies around looking for food and feeds the babies. Eventually, I can see little yellow beaks poking over the twigs and moss of the nest, and within a week, the baby birds have grown so much that they crowd each other in their tiny little temporary home. They start to test out the edge of the nest, standing on it and flapping their wings like mad, almost like they’re revving their engines in preparation for flight. And I know, every time I see that wing-flapping, the baby birds are only days away from flying off and leaving the nest empty.
That’s where they are today – at the wing-flapping stage. In fact, last night, two of them actually ventured out of the nest altogether and hopped onto the little ledge around the porch ceiling. But I guess the idea of jumping off didn’t appeal to them quite yet, and they crawled
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And is it possible to be jealous of birds? Those phoebes accomplish what I’ve so many times been unable to – they take a chance, and throw caution to the wind (literally), and trust that their wings will hold them aloft. I’ve never been much of a risk-taker, but maybe those phoebes are on to something. By tossing themselves out of the safety of the nest, they have the opportunity to see all kinds of other things out in the world.
Who knows? They might even discover a piliated woodpecker driving a Studebaker…
2 comments:
Maybe the little phoebes are your spiritual gurus showing you how to take chances, throw caution to the wind and just trust that you will be okay.
Or, maybe you are actually theirs. Maybe they watch you walking on the ground and tell themselves, "It's safe down there. She can do it and I can, too!"
I do love the idea of having fuzzy little spiritual gurus on my porch. I guess you can find a lesson in just about anything, if you look hard enough... :)
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