Chapter Two-Wildlife In Your Yard

A few weeks ago, a small drama unfolded in my front yard, after my husband and I returned from a walk. (Parent dove sitting over the baby (chick) and baby dove sitting near fence, then on the rocks I transported it to, below.)

Just a young dove and its parents, carrying on with the quiet work of life. It began after several days of rain and storms. On a spring afternoon in April, I noticed a fledgling dove (chick with feathers) sitting low against my fence. At first, I wasn’t even sure what I was looking at. It seemed almost too still—a small bundle of feathers pressed close to the ground. When I checked again later, it had only moved a few feet. Not long after that, I remembered that the lawn crew would be arriving. Concerned that the little bird might be in danger, I put on garden gloves and gently transported it to the base of an oak tree nearby. The ground there was slightly elevated and more sheltered. It seemed like a safer place.

Then came the difficult part.

I had to stop helping the fledgling. Throughout the afternoon, I watched from a distance. The fledgling rested quietly, occasionally shifting positions. At one point it moved away from the tree and onto the grass. My first instinct was to move it back to where I thought it belonged.

But I didn’t. I stood there realizing how often we mistake our discomfort for someone else’s emergency. I wanted certainty. I wanted to know the bird would be okay, and I wanted to solve the problem. Nature, however, rarely offers immediate reassurance. As evening approached, I received an answer. When I stepped outside again, an adult dove sat directly over the fledgling, Not beside it. Not near it. Over it. The parent bird remained completely still, sheltering the young bird beneath its loving body, as the baby started to squirm out, but id didn’t.

       

*In that moment, all of my questions went away.*

The fledgling had not been abandoned.

The parents knew exactly where it was as time moved on. The next morning, the scene continued. Once again, the adult dove sat over the fledgling. Later, the young bird moved to a corner of the yard near the house, while one of the parents watched from a fence post overhead.

The style of care had changed.

The parent was no longer sheltering.

It was supervising.

Watching.

Allowing space. Over the following days, I noticed the fledgling became more active. It explored new areas of the yard and moved with increasing confidence. The parents appeared and disappeared throughout the day, often perched above while the young bird rested below.

Several times I thought they had left for good.

I thought the yard would be empty, and the fence would be bare. Then, hours later, I discovered the fledgling tucked beneath a shrub or rested near the fence, with a parent standing watch from above. Only later did I learn this is exactly what fledgling doves are supposed to do.

Leaving the nest is not a single event, it is a process. Young birds spend days on the ground learning how to navigate the world. They hide and they rest. They practice short flights. Their parents continue feeding and protecting them while gradually encouraging independence.

What looked to me like vulnerability was actually growth.

What felt like abandonment was trust.

And what I interpreted as uncertainty was simply a new chapter. 

Eventually, the visits became less frequent.

The absences grew longer.

The fledgling became harder to find. One morning I walked outside expecting to see them and realized the yard had returned to ordinary life.

No fledgling.

No parent birds.

No evidence they had ever been there at all.

For a moment I felt disappointed.

Then I realized that the disappearing of their appearance was the point.

The measure of success was it not showing up for me. 

It didn’t need to. We often think meaningful experiences must be dramatic. Yet some of the most memorable moments arrive quietly. 

Over the course of several days, a family of doves taught me something I needed to learn.

Not everything needs rescuing.

Not every uncertainty needs resolving.

Sometimes the most helpful thing we can do is offer a little protection when it is truly needed, then step back and allow life in the natural world to unfold.

I did not save the fledgling.

I did not raise it.

I did not teach it to fly. I simply witnessed a small piece of the natural world doing what it has always done. And somehow, that was definitely enough.

 

8 thoughts on “Chapter Two-Wildlife In Your Yard”

  1. Nice article Sharon. It was informative and interesting. Love the pictures you took. The lesson(s) learned can apply to all of us. I particularly liked your phrasing that said “What looked to me like vulnerability was actually growth. What felt like abandonment was trust.” Thanks for sharing.

    1. Sharon O. Blumberg

      Hi Sandra,

      Thank you so much for your comment on my post about the dove family and the fledgling. That means so much as I appreciate your support!

      With warmest regards,

      Sharon

    1. Sharon O. Blumberg

      Hi Angie, thank you so much for your comment and support. It means so much to me!

      Warmest wishes,

      Sharon

  2. Hi, Sharon,

    Gosh, I had no idea birds spend a lot of time on the ground as they are learning to fly. Interesting post, and it makes me want to be more observant of the wildlife in my yard and neighborhood.

    1. Sharon O. Blumberg

      HI Suzanne,

      Thanks so much for your comment, as it means so much to me. Thanks for stopping by my site!

      With warmest wishes,

      Sharon B.

  3. Oh, I love this story. Thank you for sharing. It reminded me of the time my husband and I visited a zoo up in Big Bear, CA. All the animals there were rescued, but one group of animals did not belong there. A couple of hikers had come across four baby mountain lions. The hikers mistakenly thought they had been abandoned by their mama. They were wrong. The mother had been looking for a safer place for her family. Because the kittens were so small, she had to move them one by one, carrying each one by the scruff of its neck, to their new home. By the time the hikers got them to the zoo, it was too late to reunite them with their mother and sibling(s). A case of good intentions gone awry.

    1. Sharon O. Blumberg

      Hi Theresa,

      Thanks so much for commenting on my blog. I appreciate it so much!

      With warmest regards,

      Sharon B.

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