Publisher's Pick in the 2014 WDC Anthology.
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I Don’t See The Juncos, Anymore It is a splendid time when they first appear, sure sign up North, winter creeps ever near. It seems they can detect the exact moment of the first snow. No convincing necessary, they will show -- they always do. Busy under the feeder, foraging through seeds pushed aside by other feathery friends with less patience. The cardinals don’t seem to care, there’s enough to go around; scattered on the ground, strikingly dark against a dusting of white. Starkly they stand-out, sweetly flitting, flirting; so it seems, a perky pair brush against one another. Perhaps an early dinner then off to view a magnificent display of the sunset unfolding. The light dims quickly this time of year. After enjoying a seed-feast, fueling their famished bellies, the recent travelers find a tall branch, there to perch; the best seat sought, as the last of the light fades above the barren birch. Evergreen shadows catch the full moon, but it won’t be for long, clouding is expected. The dark coolness whips-up a chill of moisture in the air causing downy flakes, like fluffy angel feathers, to break loose in the wind. It will cover the long-armed boughs of the fir, fitting them like a well tailored shirt. Such is the unstarched finery from above. The juncos are asleep for the night. They require rest, to dig deeper into the snow for the hidden seeds buried below. Morning will be a double treat blanketed with a fresh white cover and the industrious little birds. They’ll enjoy their southern winter home; yet in my mind, it is still the North. Gazing at a gorgeous near-spring sunset, I study the amazing flying creatures surrounding this lovely paradise. Averting my eyes toward the feeder outside my window I thought, perhaps for one misinterpreted moment, that I caught a glimpse of a junco. Impossible! I said -- and that of course, is true. It’s merely my mind’s eye playing a trick. It couldn’t have been that bird at all; they don’t migrate to Florida. I don’t see the juncos anymore. I haven’t missed them until today. Author's Note: According to Wikipedia, "The Dark-eyed Junco (Junco hyemalis) is the best-known species of the juncos, a genus of small grayish American sparrows. This bird is common across much of temperate North America and in summer ranges far into the Arctic. It is a very variable species, much like the related Fox Sparrow (Passerella iliaca), and its systematics is still not completely untangled." |