"What have you surmised of life thus far, brother?"
It’s been Bird Week this first week at fish camp. I found the eaglets first.
We began the hike around the cliff of our island, hoping, hoping, staying as quiet as our dog and our anticipation allowed, our cameras around our necks. Could it be possible? Would this generous offering be given again this year? And there it was--- the perfect-circle nest on a bluff, just below and beside our island trail.
The bluff, mostly safe from fox, weasel and us.
And within the circle, a lump of fluff, a puff of exhaustion, so limp I wondered if it lived. And after several minutes of patience and devouring eyes, we saw it. It lifted its head---no, it lifted two heads. There are two! And they are just-hatched, just days old, the youngest eaglets I have ever seen in my many years of eagle-watching. Do I really get to watch this stunning transformation, from weightless scrap to a ten pound hulk in less than ten weeks? Mercy! I am excited---and glad to bring you along with me this summer. (I have a very long lens to keep me safely distant, but to bring us close. )
"Someone get me wings----please!!"
Why is Mom always so stressed? She already brought us two salmon! See? We haven't even finished them! Take a break, Mom!
"Where do we think we rank, really, in the whole scheme of things?"
"There goes Mom again. We told her she forgot dessert."
But there is more. This week Duncan brought out a birdfeeder to hang outside our window---our first ever.
And I watched again the oystercatchers who patrol our beach as regular as the tides.
And still more. This whole first week at fish camp, a sparrow has begged to be let in. He has beat at the window, at every window in the house, for hours at a time, every day this week. It is the same plump bird who flew at the window a month ago, my sons tell me, when they were out here earlier. They named him “Tubby.” Tubby bats against the glass, still not seeing it is there. He cocks his head, peers at me wiping the table, sweeping the floor. He taps the glass with his beak and feet again and again.
Did he catch a few minutes of Hitchcock’s “The Birds” and left inspired to wreak his own beaked malevolence on the world? Is he angry that we are happy and living in an inside nest and he is not? I am not unmoved by his urgency. He wants in so badly, I am tempted to just slide open my bedroom window and give him his own room. Just another bird in my own nest. But I have finally decided he is batty, loony, this addle-pated sparrow who is mimicking the wrong flighted thing, and I don’t need to feather my own nest with an angry bird, or even a needy bird.
And I will tell you a darker truth. Eight days in now, with this bird beating his (questionable) brains against our windows at all hours of the day and night, we are tired. I got up early to write this morning—my only chance today--- and spent the hours muzzling the dog instead. The bird beats the dog awake who barks us awake, and as I rush to quell the dog I am scheming the worst---how can I kill this bird? I have chased it with a broom. I have draped a sheet over the window---but it is not enough. My exhausted fishermen sons and husband, all of us who work from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. and later, need rid of this sparrow.
But then I consider. I have been just as eager and hungry and needy and persistent at the nest of the eaglets. I am lured to their nest to watch, to peer. My eye is pressed to glass as well, the camera lens and I do not want to leave. I am missing only wings and beak, but possessing all the rest: a desperate wanting to see into another life, another species, another nest, another family. I want in. Am I so different?
As I write this, I have not yet decided the fate of this bird. But I do believe, with theological certainty, that should I dispense with this troubled and troubling creature, that God will know it. That God will watch the fall of this sparrow by my hand, and what will He think, the Creator of every bluejay and eaglet and dog and man and woman and wren?
It is a blood-spattered world since the day the bitten fruit fell from Adam’s hand. I know the first eaglet hatched will sometimes consume its sibling, with no intervention from the parents. I have seen the worm writhing in the beak of the robin, the gasping murre in the talons of the eagle. Shall I join them?
I already have, in so many ways. I killed the goshawk eating our chickens with my own hands and a 2”x 4” one year. I skin the deer my sons shoot for the table. I help at the slaughterhouse when I can. I am as covered in blood as anyone, or more.
And this sparrow, the one who is waking us from sleep, who is dying to be with us, shall he die too?
Perhaps I should be swayed by the same mercy that has given me a window to the eaglets . . .
Perhaps I should be swayed by my family’s desperate need for sleep . . . .
What do you say, you who watch through this window as well?
Which mercy shall I choose?
I love that you got to see those little eaglets...thanks for sharing...what a neat gift to be able to watch them grow...as for your bird...it makes me think of a commercial for window cleaner...the windows are so clean the birds keep flying into them...maybe your windows are too clean...maybe you should dirty them up a bit :) wow...that could be a blog post in itself:)
ReplyDeletethanks for giving us a peak into your life on your island...we can all live viciously through you :)
Ro!! Well, that the first time someone has suggested that my windows are too clean!! Thank you! I am deeply moved by the possible compliment.
DeleteI am very excited about these hatchlings. It's not often you get to look down into a nest with this kind of vantage---and then to have them soooo young!! It is indeed a great gift! Headed out there again today after a few day's break.(With my camera/window in hand, of course!)
Put a picture of an owl on your window and it may stop. That happened to us once and someone told us to do the picture and it worked. Let me know.
ReplyDeleteShannon---great idea. Makes sense. He goes to every window in the house though . .. not sure how to get more than a dozen owl pictures?? Limited resources out here ... But will update you later!
Deletewell, I dispensed with a snake today because I just too grossed out thinking about walking by that corner of the house (outside) and having a snake there. I killed it, but then I got my neighbor to come over and take it away. Sorry, I just don't like snakes.
ReplyDeleteMaybe you could find some owl pictures on the Internet for your windows. I'm a quilter, but I don't think I could make that many owl hangings, and they wouldn't look like a real owl. I think you should train your eagle to think it's a flying fish. I know people in East Carolina used to put snake skins on their houses to keep the birds from pecking them. So if you can't find enough owl pictures, maybe some snake pictures would work.
Birdie, What an interesting idea! And I am learning that this is a universal and sorely under-reported problem! ((<:) Who knew?? (But then why, after all these years out here without a single window-haunting---now this one?) My science-brain is trying to figure it out!
DeleteAhhhh, well, I have no love for snakes. There's no Bible verse about God knowing the crushing of every snake . .. You're safe---twice over now!!
Such a conundrum Leslie. Could he be seeing his own reflection in the Windows? I admit I would be sorely tempted to do him in, but I'm not at all sure I could pull it off.
ReplyDeleteThe babies are amazing. I'm looking forward to more pictures and really hoping they both do well.
Linda, yes, and Tubby is still at it this morning. No let up at all since I wrote and posted. Sigh!!
DeleteI hope as well the eaglets survive and thrive! It would be sad to get attached and then--poof!! One is gone/eaten. Thanks so much for watching them with me!
Fabulous post--photos, video, and words! We often have the same problem with birds around here during nesting season. I've tried everything and finally gave up. I can't kill a bird so I just wait it out. They stop eventually. Perhaps earplugs for the humans might help? Don't know about the dog! Our lab doesn't like earplugs. My fifteen-year-old would love to shoot the winged nut with his airsoft gun but I won't allow. Now if it were a spider--well that's another story--then I'd give him a loaded automatic, but I suppose that would be over-kill. As for the eaglets--AMAZING! THANK YOU for following, photographing, and sharing their growth with us!
ReplyDeleteHang sparrow hawk silhouettes at your windows~ and keep thse windows just a tad covered with kiddy fingerprints~ might work for you; or let him in so he is happy to get out again. may cure him...
ReplyDeleteA lovely post. My heart also does not like to take life...
Thank you for all the wonderful photos
Fisher lady---sorry so long to reply! I've been on radio silence---all our links to the outside world were snuffed out! Cut off for 6 days, but the Internet finally came on today. SO---thanks for reading. A new post going up tonight!
DeleteWonderful photos, Leslie! How exciting to be able to watch these little fuzzy ones develop right from the start. As for the silly sparrow, I like your analogy, but it still made me smile. We had a robin who just about drove us wild doing the same thing. He threw himself repeatedly at the glass. I wondered if he saw his reflection as a rival. I closed blinds and he simply moved to a different side of the house and found the windows that had no blinds. Eventually I tired of living in darkened rooms and, as Shannon suggests, I photocopied large photos of an own and taped one onto every single window. Whether it was coincidentally the right time for the behaviour to stop, or whether the owl photos worked, I'll never know, but the robin instantly left. :)
ReplyDeleteWow Carol---it sounds like that might work. I don't have a photocopy here . .. Maybe someone can draw about 8 of them?? He's still at it, 2 weeks later. But I've softened, and the dog is believing he's part of the family now, so we're not being awakened like before. An unexpected solution--calm the dog!! (thanks for reading and your thoughts!!)
DeleteAh, rats... I hate typos. I photocopied photos of an *owl*, of course.
ReplyDelete