Life With Horace

poetry & essays

a burst of chickadees

2 Comments

despite the morning’s
snow and wind,
the birds came, knowing
they would feed here
in the sheltered tuck
of our house’s ell.
when they had
picked it clean,
I ventured out
with snow drunk dogs
to heap the platform
high with seed again
and stuff the suet grid.
as I struggled,
being short,
to place the hanger
on an apple branch,
a flutter led my eye
to see a burst
of small black caps,
spread scattershot
through apple arms
and lilac upright spray,
brassy bold, waiting for
their feast,
and us to go.

___________________________
not knowing what form the snow would take, it was a shock to see upwards of 30 birds (no exaggeration) together at our feeders this morning, in the middle of swirling snow and wind. mourning doves, jays, chickadees, cardinals, titmice, nuthatches, downy woodpeckers, hairy woodpeckers, a red bellied woodpecker, slate colored juncoes, the odd sparrow all came and went, constant movement, an amazing sight. our chickadees are pretty fearless, and they regularly wait (and scold us if they think we move too slowly) when the other birds have fled. the sight of 15 or so of them spread out in the branches while I filled the feeders was marvelous.

Author: Life With Horace

Poetry & Essays

2 thoughts on “a burst of chickadees

  1. At our house, any snowfall brings out the birds. Juncos, chickadees cardinals nuthatch and doves. And the occasional sparrow or house and purple wren. We lost a lot of branches from our trees last year so placed them in a huge pile next to our barn for bird shelter (they love it)
    I know exactly the marvel you feel!

    Like

  2. That sounds wonderful Barb. We don’t have purple finches back until the spring. Like you we have a brush pile (actually two), and it’s nice to know the birds use them at times like this. I also saw jays and doves sheltering in our big white pines yesterday. Many of the branches are so thick with needles that snow did not get to them.

    Like

Leave a comment

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s