I Try To Help
I really do. It’s
just that sometimes you know in your heart that what you did is not
enough. And it’s not a happy moment.
One such incident occurred in our front yard. Maybe it’s because I’m retired that I pay
attention more to the drama that occurs in the yard. I shoo squirrels from our bird feeder. I give a shout out to the robins building
nests in my trees and in the crook of a downspout. Then one morning there was a flurry of
activity near a maple out front. My wife
peeked through a window and cried out that there was a robin’s nest that had
fallen to the sidewalk below.
I went out to inspect.
There were three fledgling robins on the sidewalk around the remains of
their nest. They were far too small to
survive on their own. One seemed to have
died in the fall; the other two were barely breathing. I left thinking maybe the parent robins would
somehow try to intervene and save the youngsters. But they did not.
Later I checked again to find only one robin alive, but
trying to stand upright on the sidewalk.
Its two siblings were dead. This
robin was slumped over and I expected him to expire soon. But hours later, he was still standing at the
same place on the sidewalk. So Wendy and
I took a broom and shovel, got him onto the shovel and put him under a
bush. He tweeted loudly when he looked
up and saw me. No, I said to him. I’m not your mother.
That evening I checked underneath the bush and the baby
robin was gone. Had a predator found
him? Perhaps a neighborhood cat? Then I heard a loud “tweet, tweet, tweet” and
here comes this baby robin bounding in my direction. “No, no, no—I said I wasn’t your mother,” I
told him. I quickly left the area, hoping the mother would swoop in to assume
her role. I never saw her, but I also
never saw the baby again. I searched the yard for him or her, dead or
alive. Nothing. It’s possible that maybe it
survived. But I honestly doubt it.
A second incident occurred just
today when Wendy and I drove to downtown Ann Arbor shopping for a gift.
We weren't successful so we were getting ready to head out. We were
parked on the third level of a multi-level structure and as we got to our car,
we could see this other car trying to pull into a spot next to a concrete stanchion.
We both waved to get her attention
because she had zero clearance between the concrete pillar and the passenger
side of her car. She stopped moving so I thought she was okay (I didn't know it
was a she at the time; I just assumed). Then we heard a
kerchunkety-KERCHUNK. Oh, oh. She must have hit it. Then
another kerchunkety-KERCHUNK. She seemed bound and determined that the concrete
roof support was going to move. It didn't.
She got out of her car, saw her
predicament and became very distraught. Seemed about college
age. So we hurried over to see if we could help. I was thinking we
could guide her out of this mess but instead she handed her keys to me asking me to get it out. Wonderful.
So I tried going one way.
kerchunkety-KERCHUNK. Not the right way. And I could see the
side view mirror on the passenger side going next if I went any further. With
Wendy's help we got her out of her spot without more damage, which was already
substantial. I didn't see it myself but I could tell by the look on
Wendy's face when she checked it herself after the car was free. Made me wonder if we should have intervened
sooner. In hindsight, yes. The young girl thanked me anyway before driving away.
You just wish your good deeds could turn out a little better.
3 Comments:
I hope the little robin survived. Sad. I hate seeing things like that happen. I'm a big softy, and readily admit it.
That young lass just hoped and hoped that concrete stanchion wasn't made of concrete at all and would be a soft pillar. Her hopes were just not strong enough. I bet she won't try that trick again, though! :)
You did your best...in both occasions.
I am not a big bird fan, but I know my walking friends and I were tearing up during recent walks b/c lots of little baby birds had fallen during the course of our 2 mile jaunts and died.
Poor things didn't even have a chance.
As for the young lady-you did your best Dave. No matter what, the best is all any of us can do and as you said, sometimes it's just no where near enough.
LEE--That baby bird was quite small, but I was surprised to find it hopping so well later in the afternoon. I'm thinking that maybe if it hid in the shrubbery and the mother fed it a couple days it could have survived.
CARINE--Makes you wonder what the survival odds are for birds that hatch out. I know we had at least one robin survive in our yard because I saw a baby flying (almost sure it came from the next in our downspout) into our maple tree. His flying, and choice of perches since he landed in the leaves, was shaky, but I think he made it.
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