A grebe story

I had a regularly scheduled meeting to attend in Minnesota. I’m like the mayor of a small town except that it isn’t, it is just a campground and I’m called the president, but it might as well be one. My job is like the mayor's and I do everything a mayor would. It was an elected position, most-likely the only elected position I’ll ever have or for that matter, will ever stand for. As meetings go, this one promised nothing special, unlike the one from the previous month where we had to budget added repairs to infrastructure damage caused by snow, rodents, and extreme weather. Its scheduled date of May 10thpromised to land me some spring migrants we don’t see farther west. We arrived on Thursday the day after I had dental surgery in Watertown, South Dakota. It was from an injury I sustained way back in my big year 2016. It was something I received on St Paul Island and used to get an emergency seat on a full plane to get out of the island on my last visit there in October of that year. In Minnesota, I had to supervise the spring repairs and building projects. The electrician was still working on some severe damage to the wiring of the pool which required a complete rewiring and the next morning as I went out for a walk and spotted two new migrants for the year, a gray-cheeked thrush and quite a few, rose-breasted grosbeaks both in the trees and the place of the couple we went at into the southern hemisphere together. It is always nice for people to have feeders

So, while I was walking my dog, I got an unexpected text from our ground’s supervisor, who hadn’t realized I was three blocks away. I expected he was going to report more damage and more expenses but surprisingly, what I got was just another bird consult. Well, it wasn’t just another one. I get bird consultations all the time, in fact, this was the fourth one this week. “What kind of bird is this?” Jim’s text said along with a picture of a bird. I looked at the picture and never answered, I was walking down to the pool area in search of a rather odd bird to be seen on land. I ran into Kelly; the assistant electrician and she was finishing up the wiring for our new sauna. Her boss was ankle deep in wiring the pool shed. She showed me the bird. There in the grass was a red-necked grebe. Grebes have a problem on land, they cannot use their feet to get upward propulsion to take off, so it was stranded. I wondered how this bird got there. I looked at the alert and very scared bird. It had some sort of neck injury and was bleeding. Maybe it hit a tree? I had no idea. It was a bird that nests near my cabin and one that I expected to arrive any day on Enemy Swim Lake in South Dakota, but one I hadn’t seen yet in 2019, but even though it counted it was an odd deal. Here I was looking at a bird that needed help. I felt it was an omen that this bird would choose near to where I was walking my Springer spaniel to crash land. I guess it came here for me to help it, that was all I could deduce so I had to do what I could.


Certainly, it was the first red-necked grebe they’d have this year. It had lost a lot of blood and it was severely hurt but at least I had got it there, its prognosis by remaining where we found it was zero. It was all I could do; I had done a good deed. Maybe it was just doing what another living creature should do? I block traffic to get turtles of the road and removed toads stuck in our window box. I don’t expect a reward for doing what one should do, but they say good deeds never go unpublished. I hoped my punishment would not be too severe. In the end I could only be a driver and could only say a little prayer for the poor grebe. I hope it was enough. A year bird with a bit of a story, a red-necked grebe I won’t soon forget.
Published on May 12, 2019 20:24
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