A
few days ago I was looking through my bookshelf and ran across my Dad’s
well-used copy of the birds of Finland. I was amazed to see a check mark next
to every bird, 256 of them, in that little book. He had seen them all! As a young college
student my Dad had dreamed of becoming a botanist and naturalist, but was never
able to realize this ambition. His love of nature, however, remained with him
to his dying day and he passed on his love of the outdoors to my sister and me.
I
fondly remember summers as a little girl in Finnish Lapland, skipping happily
along next to my Dad in the woods near our home and he paused frequently to
point out plants and birds while we walked along. These were precious hours for
me. The summers in Lapland were brief, the winters long and often severely
cold. Each winter my Dad would make sure the bird feeders in our yard were
stocked with seeds. Mother was a nature lover as well, and slabs of pork fat were nailed to a board to keep little
bird bodies fueled against the cold. It was always traumatic for me as a child
when one of our little feathered friends froze in the cold in spite of Mother and Dad's
best efforts to keep them alive.
It
is only fitting then that many years later my love for birds was rekindled by a
wonderful Finnish friend, Tuula Rose. She had been bird watching for about a
year when one cold February morning she finally coaxed me into going birding
with her. Years had rolled by and I had totally forgotten my childhood nature
lessons. My awareness of local birds started and stopped with ducks, pigeons
and robins. That first morning I was introduced to 28 amazing species of birds
found right here in our local area: Cinnamon Teal, Widgeon, Marsh Wren,
Yellow-rumped Warbler, Gadwall and a soaring Golden Eagle were among the birds
I saw for the first time. I was impressed!
A
few days later Tuula took me to Camelot Park in south Provo and we tramped
through the muddy, snow-covered fields in search of a Great Horned Owl. Tuula
knew where to look and she spotted the owl almost right away tucked inside a tangle
of branches in a massive tree. It took me nearly ten frustrating minutes to
locate the owl through my binoculars. But how rewarding it was when the owl
suddenly woke up from its mid-morning nap, and stared right at me with those
huge golden eyes. It was one of those amazing “Ahhhh” moments that rarely come
along in a lifetime and I was totally hooked! I’ve been birding ever since and
my Utah life list is now closing in on 300 birds.
Thanks
Dad! Thanks Tuula! Thanks Utah County Birders! My life has been truly enriched.
No comments:
Post a Comment