Uninvited Guest
SEARCH BLOG: ENVIRONMENT
We spent the day at my second son's home along with my two other sons and my brother's family. It was the last chance to spend time with my oldest before he and his wife head back to San Francisco.
It was pretty easy to see the tiredness in their eyes. Everyone wants to spend time with them including relatives in Ohio a few hours away. So, they have dutifully traveled and spent time with everyone possible... family and friends... until all they really want is to sleep in their own bed.
Tomorrow they have the 4-1/2 hour flight back and then a whole day to relax before they fly to Los Angeles for the Rose Bowl game. Did I mention they were tired already?
Well, they are out for yet a few more hours tonight visiting the last group of friends on their list, so my wife and I came home without them to find an uninvited guest in our screened porch... a red-tailed hawk. It had flown right through a screen panel adjacent to the house; I guess it was chasing a chipmunk or squirrel and wasn't paying a lot of attention. When we turned on the interior lights, it became confused and flew into the glass door that enters into the porch.
We watched to be sure it wasn't injured and then I slowly went into the porch. The hawk scooted into a corner trying to hide. I opened the screen door leading to the outside, but it immediately ran between the screen door and another screen wall... and refused to move. Not wishing to find out how sharp its talons were, I got a broom and moved to the opposite side of the screen door from the hawk. It shuffled a bit and then ran along the perimeter away from the screen door. I followed slowly and it ran along the perimter back toward the house. I followed slowly again. At this point it was getting a bit too rattled so it tried to fly up and away. But there is the matter of the ceiling. It didn't have enough speed to injure itself, so it settled down to the floor. The door opening to the outside was in front of it. A little step by me toward the bird was all it needed to rush out the door and fly away into the night.
We had our little excitement with a non-human neighbor and then an assessed the damage to the screen panel. It looks like about 1/2 hour of repair work and neither the panel nor the hawk will be the worse for wear.
Living in the suburbs makes it easy to forget that we share space with other animals trying to make a living. This was a small reminder.
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