Saving Chippy
So, yesterday, Catherine walked outside and was immediately accosted by a fluffy, fuzz-tufted baby robin. Hopping madly, chirping insistently, he followed her around our patio and made a good try at flying for a few minutes before settling down.
She was worried for him, seeing as how he was stranded and all, but a quick call to a local bird shelter yielded the usual "Don't disturb him, the parents will take care of him" advice.
Hours later, though, the poor little guy was still standing on the patio, looking out over the lawn, flightless. Chirping infrequently, and occasionally blinking, he was wobbly on his legs and there were no Mom n' Pop robins to be found. Thirty minutes later, it was looking really grim, as he took a few stumbling steps and fell over, unable or unwilling to rise.
I started googling and hopped outside to watch over him while Catherine speed-dialed a few other bird rescues. The folks at Fox Valley Wildlife told her to bring the little guy in, and they'd see if they could nurse him to health. I scooped him up gently (he made a few encouraging kicks to get away beore I settled him into a kleenex-filled box), and Catherine hopped into the car.
This afternoon, Catherine got a call from them -- Chippy (as I've decided to call him) -- made it through. Part of me understands that nature's rough, and that we can't save every little creature that falls off the path. But sitting on the ground next to a weak little robin as it struggled to stand upright, watching it blink at me and then close its eyes, I've never been happier tht humans can give natural selection the finger.
Viva la Chippy!





You KNOW the book this
You KNOW the book this reminds me of, don't you?
Awesome!
Great post! I'm glad to hear that you were able to intervene in Chippy's life in such a dramatic and helpful way.
What happened to him after Fox Valley Wildlife?
He's going to pull through.
He's going to pull through. They're nursing him back to health now, and he'll need to be hand-fed for a while, but it looks like he'll be quite the heartbreaker in time.
Thanks for sharing
I wanted to make another comment, something I also shared on Catherine's blog about it. I loved reading it from both yours and Catherine's perspective. I'm so glad the little guy made it through. I believe your act of goodness/compassion for that tiny creature is kind of like throwing a pebble in a pond. It may seem small in the grand scheme of things, but it isn't. I believe there's a ripple effect that keeps going, reaching eternity. I think it's the heartbeat of God.
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