Sunday, February 24, 2019


We woke to one of those rare days of unseasonable warmth that occasion the deeply wintered, Y-ending months at the forefront of our calendar year. 
     Warm, but gray, a gentle rain fell, confining Peter Pan, Silky Josephine and I to the porch, where we watched a flock of Robins that had appeared in the yard, as if from out of nowhere.  
Earthworms, deceived by the rise in temperature and the patter of rain on what would be their rooftops, had come in droves, topside, and the Robins hopped from worm to worm, plucking them up and gobbling them down.    
‘If all they eat are worms?’ Josie asked of the Robins ...for she knew that this was very nearly the case, as she has been reading a great deal about birds lately ...‘And there are only one or two days during Winter that worms come out?’ She looked up to me. ‘How are they so fat?’
Indeed, the Robins were plump as gourds. Contented. As if Winter were a season of plenty. As if it were awhir with winged insects and root-fatted grubs, and not the season of teeth-chattering bleakness it actually is, devoid of all nutrients other than those few minerals found in the tips icicles and the crimped stems of browned leaves. 
‘The Robin Trees,’ I told her.
Silky’s eyes narrowed. I could see that in her mind she was paging through her bird books for some reference to these Trees. Finally, she tilted her head to the side that meant she did not know what I was talking about. Peter Pan tilted his head likewise.  
‘What’s are Robin Trees?’ Silky asked. 
‘Well ...’ I said, and took a seat to tell them of this wonder. 






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