On my walk down to
the pond, I disturbed the heron, yet again. This has become a daily habit. Fortunately for me, watching that heron fly
is so amazing.
No sooner did the
heron take flight and land in a nearby tree that my resident female Belted Kingfisher arrived. At least, I heard her. I did not immediately see her.
But, as I walked
around to the far side of the pond, she flew to the bench of the pond house
dock where she was content to sit for minutes.
Then, she flew to what I now call the ‘kingfisher tree’, that small
walnut tree growing nearest the pond and to where I was now standing.
This was the closest
that kingfisher and I have ever been. I
was ecstatic inside and tying to remain calm and motionless on my outside.
From the tree, the
kingfisher flew to the overhead electric line which runs near the pond bank
opposite the kingfisher tree bank. She
perched on that line for quite some time during which I heard some grunting
coming from the woods located uphill from the pond. I looked up just in time to see a couple of
white plumes, the tails of the white-tailed deer, move quickly through the
trees. Next I heard the shrill screams
of, what I thought was, a hawk. I was not
able to see the bird. Maybe it was an
eagle as our son thought he saw two eagles fly over the farm the previous
day.
Suddenly, the
kingfisher flew down and dove into the water returning to the pond house
deck. She was not alone. She had a fish
in her beak. WOW! More excitement for me as I had never seen
her catch a fish in all our previous encounters.
After devouring the
blue gill, the kingfisher dove into the water and returned to the bench. Then, she dove again and again returned to
the bench. She repeated this series
several more times within the course of about one minute. On her last return, she spent several minutes
preening, grooming her feathers.
In all, I had been
watching that kingfisher for over 30 minutes observing activity which was
probably part of her usual routine.
What a full
morning. I felt my day, my week, even my
month was well satisfied with these many small wonders from the wild, natural
sphere.
And, I am looking
forward, to many more marvels.
I just need to keep
my eyes and ears alert.
Note: This event took
place a few weeks ago. The past few
days have been so cold - not getting above ‘feels like 20 degrees’ according to
Intellicast that I have pretty much stayed indoors. My canine companions are not very happy with
me as they like to take a daily walk with me.
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