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"I only went out for a walk, but finally decided to stay out till sundown, for going out, I found, was really going in." --John Muir
Showing posts with label feeding the birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feeding the birds. Show all posts

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Feeding the Birds

"The hummingbird talked to me today," my husband jokes.

"What did he say?" I ask, intrigued. 

"He said, 'Mexico was great!'"

Each year we wait for the migrants to return. My mother emails from Maryland to tell me when her hummingbirds arrive: "A day later than last year!" She says, proud she had the feeder out and ready for them. 

The birds fill my yard with such outlandish color (the center-of-the-sun-orange of the oriole, the gun-wound-red of the grosbeak, the raspberry head of the house finch) and such song (if there ever was anything upon which to base faith in a supreme being, for me it would be the simple fact that birds sing), but often I forget the most astonishing thing: it is not "the orioles" that return each spring, but this oriole, this singular one, who could have a name if I'd give him one, who comes to my 2 and 1/2 acres each year after his 1,000 mile migration. I wonder what my house looks like from above, at the end of his long journey, a night-time of straight flying: the same as it looks to me when I drive over that last incline of road after visiting my family on the coast? "Well, the house is still standing," I say to my husband each time, and he nods. We unlock the doors and resume our life. 

I wonder what this oriole's winter life is like--if some family in Mexico halves oranges and spoons grape jelly into a shallow dish and sets them out for him as I do, and which place he considers his real home.

I wonder if to him I am recognizable--the one who takes down the sweetness for a few moments every other day, then brings it out again, calling, "Food for orioles!" to the inhabitants of the yard--or whether I am just "homo sapiens," some other species, a blur whose actions he may appreciate in some basic way but not need, not love.