How enriched life is by friends!
Good friends, new friends, old friends, feathered friends.
(Laural Burch)
The hen is the worst of all the animal creatures ~
because she never cackles until the egg has been laid.
(President Abraham Lincoln)
Morton Feldman, spending some time in the park as he wateched our
feathered friends, stated,
“They're not free! They're fighting over bits of food.”
Bird Tales ~ Amazing
Stories About Feathered Friends
Morning
Commotion: Early one morning
while vacationing on Cape Cod, we were awakened by a loud noise right
outside our window. I looked around outside and found a young bird in
a tree having been disturbed. My wife, thinking there was a snake in
the house, I ran to the rescue. Instead I found a red-tailed
hawk perched on a
rocking chair inside our enclosed porch ~ apparently, having flown
through a slit in the screen door. It was amazing to see the
gorgeous flier up close. Cautiously I guided the hawk to the door as
my wife watched from a distance. The bird hopped out the door and
quickly flew off, circling the house a few times as if to say,
'thanks.' (Kevin from New York)
Reindeer
Games: My son was working on
the mechanical reindeer for our Christmas display when a hawk
suddenly flew at him. It dove toward him; instead, it grabbed the
deer display with its claws and began hissing and flapping its
wings. The reindeer continued its automated movements, knocking the
hawk off its perch...and into the snow. The bird rolled
over...stared up at the deer...spread its wings...and then
disappeared. I guess the hawk was no match for a reindeeer! (Jane
from Montreal)
Humming
Along: I grew up in the
Annapolis Valley in Nova Scotia where hummingbirds
were a common sight.
I've lived in Edmonton for 36 years now, and until recently, had
never seen one here. In August of 2013, while sitting at my kitchen
table with a coffee and the crossword puzzle...and overlooking my
garden, noticing something land on a garden plant ~ wondering if it
was a grasshopper; to my shock it was a hummingbird. Took several
photos: the highlight of my summer. (Teresa)
Beware
of Mockingbird: Sitting on
my porch, a flash of movement in a vacant lot across the street, I
saw a squirrel with a northern
mockingbird
following close
behind. The duo made their way to my neighbour's roof...the bird
pecking away at the squirrel's head. Some time later, the same
mockingbird was seen chasing a red fox through my yard and across the
road onto the vacant lot! (Barbara)
Some
Like it Hot: I stood at our
sliding glass doors and watched the flurries of our first major
snowstorm. With camera in hand, I hoped the weather would draw the
birds to our feeders and heated birdbath. At least a dozen robins
descended on our garden at once to use the steaming birdbath! They
landed on it...under it...and some even hovered overhead...completely
oblivious to me with a camera while awaiting their morning's warm
bath...and visit to our feeding station. (Julian, from Iowa)
Tanager
Takes Out Wasps: Every
summer the wasps do their best to 'decorate' our 4 porches (about 96
ft. In lenght) with their nests. A male summer Tanager,
seemed to be dodging something because it was bobbing its head up and
down; it had actually pulled down a wasps' nest. (George from
Michigan)
Buzz Off!
There was a buzzard on my roof...a large red-headed turkey
vulture
was sitting on the highest point of my house. (According to an old
wives' tale, I knew,
a vulture on your roof is a bad sign,
but since it wan't doing any harm, I left him alone. Soon, several
dark shadows flew overhead ...and looking up on the roof, there sat
more than 20 vultures perched around an injured bird. Hearing a loud
squawk, the group of birds parted. With their wings flapping slowly,
they let out soft clucks, then rising together from the roof, they
flew away. The lone bird joined them, wobbling at first before
flying with the rest of the flock. (Kit from Vermont)
Fireworks at
Ballpark Threat to Osprey:
Aminor-league
baseball fan in Florida is on a mission to help a pair of ospreys
whose nest atop the left field lights is in the path of the weekly
fireworks show.
Celine Sullivan is a longtime fan of the Daytona Torgugas.
She tells the Daytona Beach News Journal she watched the smoke and
flaming debris swirl around the ospreys during a fireworks show after
the home opener. Sullivan and David Hartgrove of the Halifax River
Audubon chapter asked the team to either stop the fireworks show ~ or
move it. It was not an issue last season when the nest was atop the
first base lights. Team president and city spokesperson Susan Cerbone
say they'll work on a solution. The team is an affiliate of the
Cincinnati Reds.
(The foregoing are excerpts from the National Geographic magazine and
local press)
Our Friend, The
Bird
Our world is enhanced by birds on the wing;
They grace our blue skies as they chirp and they sing.
Their early spring songs bring joy to the ear,
A summer of songs many months we shall hear.
The robins, the sparrows, a help to mankind,
eat pesky mosquitoes and bugs that they find.
Geese on the lake or ducks on the shore,
they want to be friends and ask nothing more.
A companion for man, their songs fill the air,
enjoyment they bring, so much to share.
The hunmingbird's quickness shows lightening speed,
as it pollinates flowers seed after seed.
Year after year, there's a ritual sight
as geese form a V on their ritual flight.
Let's be their companions, protect what they need,
and our fine, feathered friends will return our good deed.
(Linda Macleod of Uxbridge, Ontario submitted this poem
on behalf for her friend, Ken Parsons, who sadly passed away at
age of 81)
Compiled by Merle Baird-Kerr...April 17, 2018
Comments welcome: mbairdkerr@cogeco.ca
or inezkate@gmail.com
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