Unto Dust

Beautiful night tonight, so I decided to get some miles in and walk home. It’s about 7 miles, or 2.5 hours. My favorite parts are the the paths on either side of the Reflecting Pool in front of the Lincoln Memorial and the walk over Memorial Bridge. The Crows were just heading to their Arlington roost when I got to the bridge, an endless dark ribbon of thousands of birds gliding over the river. Every once in a while a couple of them would collide seemingly intentionally, like they were messing around and playing aerial bumper cars for the heck of it.

My least favorite part is the stretch of Fairfax Drive between N. Meade Street and N. Pierce Street. It’s Death Valley for the Crows, a dip in the road where they can’t see the cars coming as idiotic, self-important humans gun their engines to make the light at the intersection of where N. Ft. Myer Drive becomes N. Meade and Fairfax Drive. I’ve lost count of the flattened Crows I’ve seen, their bodies crushed into the asphalt. One little fledgling was ground into the double yellow lines, likely on his/her maiden flight.

Every once in a while, like tonight, I’ll find dead Crows by the side of the road or in the grass. If I can bury them, I will, but tonight’s pair were nothing more than feathers and bones. The one in a parking space was so far gone as to be a pile of feathers and a rib cage mixed with leaves and the random detritus humans leave behind to poison the landscape—string, a bottle cap, a baby’s sock, some sort of black plastic. I couldn’t tell where the Crow’s head had been, as the wing feathers were pointed every which way. The one on the grass still had his/her form, but the body and all of the head except the beak were gone. I apologized to both of them for humanity’s carelessness, and bid them rest in peace.

As I walked away, I reminded myself that I should just go up Wilson Blvd., where it’s all restaurants and nightlife and I’ve never seen any dead birds or creatures. But that wouldn’t have prevented my finding a squirrel sprawled out on the sidewalk about three blocks from where I live. I’ve probably seen that squirrel on my many walks to the grocery store. The two corner houses have yards and there are always squirrels scampering about. There are also a lot of squirrels in the park.

I couldn’t leave her there, where people would step over her and skirt around her with expressions of disgust on their faces. Sooner or later someone might have picked her up by the tail and thrown her in a trash can. So I got my gloves out of my naloxone kit, picked her up, and carried her. Her eyes were cloudy and her arms, neck, and legs were stiff, but her belly was still soft and slightly warm. She reminded me of Meeka (or Mica, short for Amica), the squirrel who used to sit in the tree, look in the window, and watch cartoons when I put them on for Inigo. Meeka’s tummy was also still warm when I found her a couple of years ago, after she got hit by a car.

I’m sure people thought I was mad, carrying a dead squirrel down the street, holding her with two hands before me as though I were bringing a birthday cake with lots of lit candles into a dining room. But I don’t care. She deserved better than to be left there on the sidewalk, so I buried her beneath some evergreens.

Tonight’s walk drove home something that eats away at me: We humans will never live in harmony with animals. We trap them, poison them, shoot them, and run them over when they’re in our way. We break their bodies to get eggs. We steal their babies to get milk. We crate them, bind them, pluck them, hang them, decapitate them, force-feed them, and scald them alive to feed our appetites. We call the ones strong enough to suffer a slaughter “Grade A,” and we beat, gas, electrocute, stomp, or simply toss in a pile and leave to die those who are too weak or sick to stand. We isolate them, imprison them, sicken them, cut them, burn them, inject things into them, put things in their eyes, sew devices under their skin, and amputate their limbs in the name of science.

Then we reel back in horror when we see people do any of this to cats and dogs, parrots and bunnies, hamsters and horses.

It’s cognitive dissonance on a good day, hypocrisy on a bad. I’m including myself in that: A lot of the candy I’ve featured this month has milk in it. I’m also a pescatarian, doctor’s orders. I take medications that were tested in animals, and the stent holding an artery in my heart open was tested on animals, including rabbits, pigs, dogs, sheep, rodents, goats, and nonhuman primates. I owe animals my very life.

But it fills me with an endless, bottomless sorrow that any animal comes to harm because of me. Most vegans and vegetarians can tell you about their epiphany, the moment the suffering we cause animals became real to them. Mine was in a grocery store, looking for ingredients to make a soup. I saw a package labeled “whole chicken, cut up” and those words were just so graphic, so gruesome, boom, the light went on. All I could see was the body parts still on the bird. All I could think was, “Wings…just like Inigo’s.” I started crying right there in the store.

I’m not a praying woman, but if I were, I would pray for people to come to see how all animals—and not just the cute or beautiful ones we keep as pets—deserve our compassion. All animals have emotions. All animals can be playful, grumpy, happy, tired, angry, or sad. Most have social bonds as families, herds, flocks, or other groups. They welcome others, battle others, make friends with others, and grieve others of their kind. I’d say all of them are sentient to some degree. And all of them want to live.

No candy tonight. I’m too sad.

Instead, a PSA: When you see a bee in distress, like this one was after landing in my margarita, offer some sugar water. The folks at the restaurant gave me a sugar packet, I mixed it with water, and this little one drank from my fingertip and then from a drop on the table. She perked up, then after a few laps overhead, she flew away to get on with her day—hopefully without a hangover! Every little life is big to the one living it.

Crows Know

I’ve always been a fan of Crows. Their dark beauty, their intelligence, and their sociability draw me to them. Unfortunately, Crows get a bad rap. Some people see them as omens, warnings, a sign that evil or death is near, or a menace, and whenever they appear in movies you know something bad is about to happen.

I don’t think that’s fair, because they’re some of the most brilliant and just creatures on earth. Scientists have known for years that Crows remember faces and how they feel about you. If they like you, cherish that. They may even bring you gifts. But if they dislike you, you might as well move to another part of the country—before they run you out.

One day a few years back I ran into these two on my way to the Department of Motor Vehicles to renew my license.

An adult Crow with a juvenile Crow standing on top of a bus stop shelter.

They were so close I could reach up and touch them. As I took the photo, more Crows landed nearby, and I thought, “They either like me or they’re here to escort me to the nearby coven for chastisement.” Fortunately they appeared to approve of me, as evidenced by a lack of danger calls and berating statements. I am grateful for it, too, because not only do they remember you and their character assessment of you, they teach their young accordingly, as the adult (left) may have been doing with this “teenager.”

The Crow below landed on the balcony of Hellscape while I was working at the dining room table.

A Crow perched on a ledge, facing away, as seen through the slats of some blinds.

We were about 10 feet apart. The Crow saw me, so I said, “Hello, beautiful bird.” It studied me for a moment, adjusted its feathers, shifted its weight from one foot to the other in a little half-turn, then cawed.

At the time I sensed it was curious, maybe even confused, like “wait, what, a human?” and perhaps wanted to tell its companions something.  But now I wonder if it was just put off by the vibes of the place and told its flockmates to stay away because no other Crows ever came to visit.

Not like here. Here I have all kinds of birdie visitors to my balcony, including a family of Crows led by one I think of as Octavi, short for either Octavian or Octavia as I don’t know the bird’s sex. Octavi would come to my balcony alone for the first few months after I moved in, attracted by peanuts I put on the railing. Then one day there were two. (Octavi is on the right.)

Two Crows on a railing. One is eating a peanut, the other is looking toward the camera.

It turns out that Octavi has a family on the property, for not long after that, there were three, all adults, who would come to the balcony. Then I noticed their nest in a tree across the grounds. It might seem that the threesome was some sort of love triangle, but sometimes the adult offspring of a Crow couple will stick around and help raise babies. Other times, adults in the extended family like aunts, uncles, or cousins stay with a Crow couple to help out, too.

This year, it appears that the family has grown to seven: Octavi, spouse, the other adult, and four new additions who are now fully grown but still hang around the tree.

Crow family life fascinates me. Each family keeps to itself until after the breeding season. Then, once the juveniles are fledged and able to forage on their own, Crows often convene in giant flocks in the evening to introduce their families to one another and mingle. I’m fortunate enough to live just a couple of miles from one of the biggest gathering spots in Arlington, and if I time my evening walks correctly, I’ll see thousands of them fly in from all directions to one spot, and sometimes I will stand on a corner greeting them. Yet some families convene in smaller flocks, while others, like Octavi’s, don’t seem to go very far at all. I don’t know why they do this, but perhaps they’re not so different from people in a way, where some are super social and like a big raucous gathering and others are more insular and introverted. Or maybe Octavi’s family know a good thing when they have it, because they love to forage and play tag with each other in the grass by their tree.

A lot has been said about “Crow funerals,” where Crows gather around their dead and appear to mourn, but now scientists think that part of the ritual involves learning what happened to their fallen one, the better to avoid the same fate. I tend to side with the scientists on that. A couple of years ago, I was forever finding Crows that had been struck and killed by cars in one particular dip in the road near where the huge flock convenes in the evening. This year, I only saw one, a poor fledgling not much bigger than my fist, flattened so that I couldn’t get it off the road. Another night I did find a recently deceased Crow in some grass by the road as well, but that one that didn’t appear to have any car-related injuries, and I was able to lay it to rest in some nearby bushes. They’re magnificent even in death, their feathers a dark prism of pinks, yellows, blues, and greens.

Are Crows mystical and attached to the Great Beyond, like so many myths and legends would have us believe? Maybe.

One sleepless night, not long after Inigo and I said goodbye, I went out onto the balcony at roughly 2:00 a.m. to get some air and try to find some peace in the cold stillness of the early March air. The trees were still bare, and when I looked up, a Crow was up in the branches of the maple in front of my apartment. I could only see the shape of the bird, but I sensed it was looking at me, and rather intently at that. It was actually kind of unnerving, the one time I’ve ever been unsettled by a bird. The Crow extended a wing and shook out its feathers. We stood there for several minutes, me looking at the Crow, the Crow seeming to look at me.

“Octavi?”

The Crow shook out its feathers once more, flapped its wings, then swooped down from the tree, descended toward me for a split second, then turned and flew off, leaving only the sound of its beating wings.

I still don’t know if it was Octavi, but whoever it was, I felt like that particular bird was there that night on purpose. This Crow had a reason to be in that tree, alone, facing my balcony and bedroom window, almost like it was waiting for me to give up on sleep and step outside. Maybe it was a messenger. Maybe it was standing guard. Maybe it wanted me to know it was there.  I suppose I’ll never know.

But I do know this: Crows are part of this world, and they have things to teach us.

Abstract artwork painted by a Crow.
“A Study of Riddles,” painted by Apollo the Crow of Diva Crows Wildlife Rehabilitation Center.

Celebrating (the end of) 2022.

Today Holidailies asks “What do you actually celebrate during the holidays, if anything?”

I’m an atheist, so nothing religious. I celebrate friendship, the achievements of the year, the wonder of winter, and the festive spirit around me. I haven’t put up a tree in 9 years, but when I did, it was a Memory Tree, not a Christmas tree: The ornaments were given to me by my parents or friends, or I bought them on my travels, while out with friends, or as a collector’s item.

This year I’m also celebrating the forthcoming end of 2022, as this was not a particularly fabulous year. It was great up until about April, and then I got hammered with a bunch of health issues, starting with a root canal retreatment after a dentist missed an entire canal a few years ago. But hey, I still haven’t gotten You-Know-What-19, knock on wood and let’s not tempt fate.

The biggest thing is that I’m officially a heart patient, after a scan revealed a 40-60% blockage in a coronary artery. So now I have a cardiologist. He put me on rosuvastatin (Crestor) and wow, my LDL and triglycerides fell into the basement and my HDL is at pre-menopausal levels. The only real side effect I’ve gotten is that if I don’t stay hydrated my spit gets kind of bubbly and frothy, you’re welcome for the image. It also makes me a bit tired, but it’s actually a good thing because when my head hits the pillow, I’m out. Me, a lifelong insomniac. I mean, while the lights are on I’m awake, but once I flip the switch, I get sleepy very quickly. Weird but true.

When I spoke to my cardiologist, I said, “So, what, about 75?” Meaning my lifespan. Hey, next year, when I hit 57, I will have outlived everyone on my father’s side of the family except my father. People on his side all had lousy tickers and died in their early to mid 50s, which is why my internist sent me to a cardiologist in the first place.

Anyway, the cardiologist said, “NINETY-five.”

“I’ll compromise and say 85.”

“No, NINETY-five.”

“Doc, I don’t want to be 95 years old in the United States, for all kinds of reasons.”

And it’s true. I don’t. For one thing, I’m a Gen-Xer. I don’t suffer from the delusion that I’ll ever be able to fully retire. For another, with the American politics, health care system, and treatment of senior seniors being what they are, no. And there is some Alzheimer’s in my family and I want my body to go before my mind.

But let’s not dwell on all of that. Point is, I’m SUPER glad that 2022 is drawing down because I’ve had better years.

And it started so WELL, too, with a fun New Year’s Eve party, some great city-hikes, a day-trip to Richmond, and plans to go to Poland to see my favorite band, Poets of the Fall (which got canceled for a few reasons).

Moving on, as this is a HAPPY occasion…

I did enjoy one thing all year, though: My apartment. After a major misfire with my last place, I’m happy to report that the place I moved into a year ago is PERFECT for me. It’s big, I love the layout, I have two full bathrooms (one of which is pretty much Inigo’s, heh), a separate office, and a spare room that I use as a home gym. I’m near everything—restaurants, nightlife, groceries, drugstore, some retail, most of my health care team, parks, trails, the county library, and a Metro station–but my place isn’t on a main drag. I told the landlord I’m not leaving unless I relocate, retire, expatriate, or expire. It’s perfect for aging in place.

Bonus: There is a great tree right in front of my living room window and all sorts of birds come by. Blue Jays, Sparrows, Chickadees, Northern Mockingbirds, Mourning Doves, American Robins, American Crows, and Fish Crows are the main visitors, but this fall a White-Breasted Nuthatch stopped by, and a Downy Woodpecker spent a few days woodpecking.

Squirrels of assorted hues, including black, also scamper around, and I like to think one of the black ones is the son or daughter of Amica, the black squirrel who used to sit in the tree and watch my TV through the window when I put cartoons on for Inigo. Unfortunately, she died. I found her curled around a fencepost last winter, not long after she passed as her tummy was still warm. Her back legs and hips were broken, so she probably got clipped by a car. I cried for a week and miss her still.

Here she is, as seen through the window, welcoming me when I took measurements of the apartment before I moved in. Whenever I put cartoons on, she would sit in the tree just like that and watch them.

 

I often put peanuts on the balcony railing. In the spring the Crows come for them, but lately the Blue Jays seem to have claimed the territory. I think they know my face and see me from afar because when I went out there today to put the peanuts out, I could have sworn there were no birds in any of the trees nearby, and suddenly a Blue Jay landed in the tree, looked at me, and let out a low series of whistles and soft chirps that sounded a little bit like R2-D2 gargling. Then it let out a few of the more customary and ear-splitting Blue Jay calls and boom, three more flew in. So I said, “Peanuts here! Get yer peanuts here!” and went inside to watch them from the living room. I’ll try to get some photos of them, but they are still a little skittish.

This entry is getting long, so I’ll end it here.