I engaged in some gonzo gardening today. The quince had grown up and over on one side, and the privet and a burning bush had grown up and over on the other, and the little path of grass down the side of the yard to the lower terrace had become a tunnel. Besides the fact that the grass didn't much like all the shade, the tunnel wasn't quite head high, so it was an ordeal to transverse.
Out came the loppers. Chop, chop, chop and I had a pile of branches to haul down the hill. As I came back up, my heart stopped: there was a bird's nest in the grass, wrenched out of the quince.
I didn't find any evidence of eggs, so I am hoping that it was an unused or vacated nest.
But when I picked it up, my heart sobbed again. Besides grasses and twigs, one of the building materials for the nest was the cellophane wrapper from a pack of cigarettes.
Shall I be glad that the bird was so cleverly thrifty? Or sad that the cigarette wrapper was there for the taking?
The glass, she is half full and she is half empty.
23 June 2018
Recycling
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1 comments:
I guess I would be impressed that the bird was that creative. having said that, I too am saddened and maddened by litterers. We have someone on our road who throws out aluminum pop cans. Dante's Inferno ought to have a special circle for such slobs.
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