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Wing clipped at birth, domestic birds they were. Farm and spacious pen bound together six years. She a prodigious egg layer, Don her attentive, aggressive defender. Daisy one day predator killed, old Don outwardly mourning her loss became a very different bird. All alone for the first time in his Duck life. We opened his gate and let him free roam. A lonely flightless fowl only earth bound. All aggression subsided with no mate to protect, he became more social, needing a friend. Crossing the yard from the barn, when ever he may see us there. He hunkers down in the shade while I tend to the garden, him like a supervisor, chortling occasional reprimands or encouragements, I can never tell which. All just to be close to some living thing. He will chase after wild doves that land near by, sadly mistaking them as perhaps a new mate, they fly quickly away, him wondering what social Duck blunder he might have made. When finished in the garden, Don and I to the barn retire, I ladle out a cup of corn for his pleasure. Then it's back to his always open pen where his bathtub sits, I turn on the hose and his excitement ramps up. Excitedly he squawks and ***** his wings, jumps into the tub, dives below the surface, reveling in the cool spray of man made current in his artificial lake, and with our few moments of companionship shared. Him doing what ducks do, for a while loneliness abated. It's almost as if I can see a smile on his pleasant Duck face. Most days he sits close to the chickens pen, watching the laying hens, scratching and moving within, perhaps wishing he was in there with them. I fear that if I open that wire door and let him go in, that those ladies would peck him bald or even dead. No matter how much a lonely Duck wishes he were a chicken, they remain birds of a very different feather, and a Duck can remain but a Duck forever. A thing we might all remember....
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Jul 4, 2017
Jul 4, 2017 at 5:29 PM UTC
A Feathered Friend
Wing clipped at birth, domestic birds they were. Farm and spacious pen bound together six years. She a prodigious egg layer, Don her attentive, aggressive defender. Daisy one day predator killed, old Don outwardly mourning her loss became a very different bird. All alone for the first time in his Duck life. We opened his gate and let him free roam. A lonely flightless fowl only earth bound. All aggression subsided with no mate to protect, he became more social, needing a friend. Crossing the yard from the barn, when ever he may see us there. He hunkers down in the shade while I tend to the garden, him like a supervisor, chortling occasional reprimands or encouragements, I can never tell which. All just to be close to some living thing. He will chase after wild doves that land near by, sadly mistaking them as perhaps a new mate, they fly quickly away, him wondering what social Duck blunder he might have made. When finished in the garden, Don and I to the barn retire, I ladle out a cup of corn for his pleasure. Then it's back to his always open pen where his bathtub sits, I turn on the hose and his excitement ramps up. Excitedly he squawks and ***** his wings, jumps into the tub, dives below the surface, reveling in the cool spray of man made current in his artificial lake, and with our few moments of companionship shared. Him doing what ducks do, for a while loneliness abated. It's almost as if I can see a smile on his pleasant Duck face. Most days he sits close to the chickens pen, watching the laying hens, scratching and moving within, perhaps wishing he was in there with them. I fear that if I open that wire door and let him go in, that those ladies would peck him bald or even dead. No matter how much a lonely Duck wishes he were a chicken, they remain birds of a very different feather, and a Duck can remain but a Duck forever. A thing we might all remember....
Unless you think this a tale just for children, this real life lesson example, is actually universal.
Written by
M/American
Jul 4, 2017
Jul 4, 2017 at 5:29 PM UTC
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