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Two Birders To Go
http://ornithographer.blogspot.com
Journal of Bob & Cynthia's birding-photography adventures in California and beyond.
Recent Posts
Angels and..not
I have always believed that there is some degree of camaraderie among bird photographers. I mean, isn't it great and even mutually beneficial when bird photographers engage in some convivial discussions or even show some cordiality when bum...
A Taste of Things to Come - Birding in the Philippines
This post is a bit anachronistic - narrating events that transpired before my latest blog - but it has to be told, and you'll know why.It has been almost 25 years since I left the Philippines. I have returned three times since, in 1997, 2004 and 2006...
Godwit us ...and everything just falls into place
It was one of those days when everything turned out perfectly. Last Saturday's outing was saved by seeing a Golden Eagle scarfing on an unfortunate Coot. Earlier that morning we completely dipped at finding the Bar-tailed Godwit - a southern Californ...
Our Trip to the Philippines - A Retrospect
We are back in California. It was a thrilling, if hectic, fortnight we had visiting our home country – the Philippines. To those of you who have never been there or have not been back recently, here are a few impressions and memories:Weather -...
A Golden Day, Bar None
To shake off our jet lag resulting from our recent trip to the Philippines, Cynthia and I decided to chase after the Bar-tailed Godwit at the Upper Newport Bay. We probably arrived a tad too late because the tide was already rising and as such, ...
Face-off
I just did my first serious birding in the Philippines after more than 30 years! I have been back several times before but my time was always spent with family and friends. Now it was different! Cynthia and I visited the campus of the University of t...


About four weeks ago, I found a baby bird on the ground next to my car. I took it home and with my wife's help we nursed it. I meant to keep him so we made a makeshift incubator. We bought baby bird formula and began to hand feed him. We got him a cage. The little bird grew. He would let us pick him up. He would start chirping loudly when he'd see me prepare his food. We often let him out of his page, and as birds naturally do, he learned to fly. When I or my wife were at home we'd open his cage and he would fly out. He would eventually fly back to his cage, hop on the swing and happily swing wildly on the swing waiting for his next feeding. My sons learned to look out for him. Now and then they would gently pick him up and return him to his open cage. I grew very fond of him. My wife went out of town so I had to feed him more often. I would bring the formula in a dropper, I would open the cage and he would jump right out the cage and call for his food. He would open his little beak and I would squeeze the food into his gullet. When I returned home from work, I sat next to his cage and opened it. When he noticed that the cage was opened, he'd jump from his perch to the gate fly around the house once and perch himself on his favorite corner outside of his cage. On several occasions I noticed a quiet sweet chriping sound while I watched tv. I turned the tv's sound off thinking that the sound came from the tv or from outside birds. But it was him! When I looked at him, his chest feathers were fluffed up and his beak was barely open. I felt as if he was singing to me! He began to peck at seeds but still wanted the formula. As of Friday august 7 he stopped eating from the dropper. He started eating seeds and drops of baby bird formula. On Sunday May 9, my older son gave the little bird a bath. My wife told me that He had done it before so I thought nothing of it. After his bath My son wrapped him in a towel. When I went to check on him my little bird was dead. I don't know what happened. We left him alone wrapped in the towel for a few minutes.
I miss this little bird so much. I was so accustomed to feeding him, to let him out of his cage, to pick him up and pet him, to let him fly around the house. I miss his quiet chirping. It is amazing to me how one little life of God's creatures can bring us so much joy, and yet how even a little life is so fragile and precious.
Posted: August 10th, 2009 | Report This Comment