Wednesday, July 5, 2017

The Tale of the Plucky Little Nuthatch

My room is outdoors, in a sense, and when I go there all my secrets come with.  Fortunately, it’s a comfortable room, standing on posts six feet above the patio, with stairs off the back side from a landing.  I built it myself, and was pleased to discover that many of the lessons I had thought did not set in, as my father continually remodeled his house for fifteen years while his family expanded to seven kids, did.  Having two brothers whose carpentry skills greatly exceeded mine was a bonus.
I built it right, too, with a good ledger board well anchored to the wall, and the right kind of concrete supports under the main beams spaced appropriately, so it feels solid, even after fourteen years.  I just replaced the stair treads down to the patio this year after the sun got to them.  The Deckmaster stainless brackets and screws are hidden under the deck boards, which gives it a smooth finish that needs little maintenance.  My brother taught me that one, after he built a similar deck on his house.  Of course, he made his floor out of teak, but he’s just that way, always looking for perfection.
Our deck has an excessively pleasant view, looking out through the five Douglas firs in our back yard to what is now a permanent green belt to the east behind us and our neighbors, crowded with cedars, hemlocks, Doug firs, cottonwood, alders, and the undergrowth featuring a trackless tangle of Himalayan blackberries and Salal, Oregon Grape, ferns and Indian Plum, among others.  There is a trail through there that is kept open by the pounding feet of the Lindbergh Eagles, whose every passage is accompanied by a baying chorus of dogs from all the back yards.  Our yard is filled with impressive green and growing plants, as my wife slowly achieves her gardening vision upon retirement, heavily weighted towards plants that are also edible, as well as enhancing the view.
Among her many interests are the birds that flock to the fuchsia baskets suspended under the rain gutter, not to mention the seed feeder hanging from an ornamental bit of ironwork around the corner where the Doug fir next to the chimney dominates a shady haven created by fencing designed to keep the dogs out.  Hanging from both ends in the center are two hummingbird feeders, which you may remember having heard about in the past.  Nothing to report on that front, but the research continues, and hope dies hard in the faithful breast.  We see flickers, downy woodpeckers, hummingbirds, nuthatches, chickadees, wrens, finches and grosbeaks, and jays, who clamor for peanuts, which she tosses up on the translucent roof over the deck.
Hanging from the extended main roof support beam on the north end is a dragonfly welded out of nuts, bolts and wire by one of her co-workers many years ago, large enough to carry in its arms (feet?) a wire mesh suet cake holder to complete the smorgasbord of attractions for the avian visitors in our back yard.
When I am reclined in one of the Adirondack chairs we got from the kids in the Wood Shop program at Lindbergh, with her shabby chic table finished with a leftover piece of tile from her bathroom project holding up a good microbrew in a glass at my elbow, gazing out over the panorama, a feeling of ineffable peace washes over me.  One of the cottonwoods off in the distance even had a couple of branches that somehow formed a heart shape against the background of the sky last year, which I took to be an omen of sorts.  The noise of the invisible highway is a murmur in the background, as eagles, crows and hawks match the more distant jets in size as they pass overhead.  The clouds paint pictures on my retinae. 
So one day, I’m sitting out on the deck, idly watching the birds peck away at the suet cake while waiting for the hummingbird to strike, and I notice a small bird, a nuthatch, hanging from the bottom of the suet cake basket by his left foot.  His right leg was broken somehow, and projected off to the side.  The poor little guy could barely reach up from his upside-down perch on the bottom of the basket, hanging on for dear life with one foot while he desperately sought another beak full of the concentrated suet/seed mix that was his only hope.  When he fluttered away, I was sure he was a goner.  Mother Nature doesn’t take prisoners.
But, to my surprise, he made it through the night, and was back the next day.  This went on for several weeks, and I began to look forward to the first sighting of the day, as the fledgling somehow continued to gain weight and strength, no doubt largely because of the food supply we provided.  The broken leg bothered him less over time, as the left side got stronger to make up for the loss.
Now, in the middle of the season, he seems to have made it to adulthood.  We’ve started to root for him as a symbol of can-do, our mascot of the underdogs, and hope he makes it through the coming winter.

So, too, he becomes a metaphor for our own struggles against problems large and small, health issues, money problems, accidents, and injuries, with a simple message that says, “Don’t give up!  Keep flying as high as you can, and eat lots of suet cake!”  I’m sure we humans can substitute donuts for the suet cake, if we wish, but the thought remains the same.  :-{)}