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Al's
Musings
A
Glass Act: Bang! Bang!
I was trying to work in my home office. There
is always something that strives to keep me from getting
any work done. The sound was coming from our living room.
I decided to investigate, armed as I was with only a nearly
exhausted Bic pen.
There was nothing in the room except my faithful canine
companion, Towhee. Towhee was staring at the large picture
window filling a good portion of one end of the room. I
heard a bit of what I could only describe as fluttering
and then the banging began again.
I saw the culprit. It was a robin. I wasn’t surprised.
The robin, particularly the male robin, is known for its
attacks upon windows. The male bird, all but dripping in
testosterone, sees its image in the reflection from the
glass and decides to drive the intruder from the area. It
is a territory thing. The robin spots its mirrored image
and thinks, “That is an unbelievingly handsome fellow,
but he has to go.” Then he attacks. The image in the
window proves to be a tough foe to vanquish. The robin needs
to attack regularly.
This problem can usually be corrected by removing the image
by soaping the window or placing cardboard or waxed paper
on the outside of the glass. A feisty male bird, feeling
his oats and suffering from what my wife calls “a
guy thing,” will move to another window. I have even
seen birds fight with an exterior mirror or a baby moon
hubcap on a car.
I removed the reflection from our window with some waxed
paper and thinking the problem solved; I went back to my
endeavors.
Shortly, I heard the all too familiar banging. Towhee barked.
I assumed that the robin had moved his aggressive behavior
to another window. He had not. The robin was continuing
his fight with the same window. I soaped the window while
leaving the wax paper on.
I barely made it to my office when the banging on the windowpane
resumed. Towhee now had assumed the posture of head tilted
to one side as she looked at the window. This is the way
she expresses confusion. I tilted my head to the side. I
was confused also. I then added cardboard to the window
without removing the soap or the wax paper. This would fix
the robin’s wagon, I was convinced.
I almost sat down on my desk chair when the banging began
again. The cardboard only worked to amplify the sound. Since
I couldn’t see through the glass, I now walked outside
to confront my tormentor. The robin was attacking an image
that existed only in his memory. He fought so fiercely that
he left blood on the window and on the cardboard. He would
fight to the point of exhaustion. I could actually pick
up the worn-out bird in my hands. This robin needed to enroll
in an anger management class.
As the frequency of the bird’s forays into battle
failed to lessen over the next couple days, I decided that
I needed to spend more time with my feathered friend. I
watched the robin arrive early in the morning. He would
fly into the yard from undisclosed sleeping quarters and
begin his day with a refreshing bath in our birdbath. Then
it was time for breakfast. It is the most important meal
of the day. He flew to a highbush cranberry shrub. A beautiful
plant, this cranberry is what I call a “spinach plant.”
There are “ice cream plants” that produce berries
that are devoured by birds the minute they become ripe.
The raspberries, blueberries and serviceberries in my yard
suffer this fate. The “spinach plants” are those
that produce fruit that the birds may not be willing to
eat until the tastier berries are gone. Some of these berries
need a frost on them to make them palatable. Sometimes the
fruit of the highbush cranberry hang on the tree all winter
long and provide much needed sustenance to the birds arriving
in the spring. These were the berries my friend robin was
eating.
I watched a seemingly normal robin chow down on the shriveled
cranberries. Suddenly, the bird’s demeanor changed—and
not for the better. After downing a number of berries, the
robin flew rather erratically to the window hidden behind
the cardboard and began fighting with the spot where it
believed its image to be.
Then it dawned on me. The robin was eating fermented berries.
I was dealing with a sloshed robin. This explained his Jekyll
and Hyde behavior. There was only one thing to do.
I called the local chemical dependency treatment center.
I asked one of the counselors if they treated avian alcoholism.
I admitted that I did not know if the bird had insurance
to cover the treatment. It sounded like the guy hung up
on me. It must have been a bad connection.
©Al
Batt
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