Apologies for the delay, these
last 2 weeks have been somewhat manic and actually enjoyable.
They grow up so fast.
On average in just 62.19 days
for the Yellow-shouldered Amazon. At the very beginning of my stay I peeked
into the heart of a Mispa tree and was confronted by 3 tiny sceptical faces
wondering why the face at their hollow was not that of a parrot. In the few short (or exasperatingly long,
depending on who you ask) weeks I have watched these 3 faces change.
I have watched the parents
struggle to feed their brood, making endless ferry flights to and from the
nest, faces often so covered in fruit that they are unrecognisable as
Yellow-shouldered amazons. I have watched the youngest of the 3 fall by the
wayside and die, as the youngest of bird broods are wont to do, and be buried
by the parents in the bottom of the tree hollow to confuse later
archaeologists.
Eventually I returned one day and,
after much practice, gracefully swing up to the crook of the tree and peer into
the nest. I poke my head over the cavity and, to our mutual surprise, there is a
fledgling about 7 inches from my face.
We pause. With a grumble and a flurry of wings he releases the rim of
the hole and drops to the bottom and glares. Curiously back up at me, as if
half annoyed and half grateful that I have delayed his entry into the real
world.
I smile, snap a few pictures
and shimmy back down to my terrestrial world. But this will not be the last he
sees of me. Returning to base I show the photo to Chris.
“Fuck, we need to get a move
on.”
The precise season of the
yellow shoulders varies from year to year and the best way of keeping a finger
on the pulse is to have a conveniently located nest which to can scale and pear
at to see how old they are. Ideally you catch them earlier than this, when
there is a full complement of fledglings to be banded so that they can be
identified in later life and to fractionally deter poachers. The move on we
need to get now is a race around all the known, and unknown nests to band the
fledglings before they become enraptured by their bright new world.
The next day we return to the
Mispa tree in force. We do not have the radio collars we were also hoping to
deploy but then again I can hardly blame them for not wanting to come to this
island. We do however have bird bands, special pliers, a small draw string bag
and a length of wire with a bend in the end.
“Who wants to go fishing?”
asks Michelle holding up the piece of wire.
“I do”
I reply before anyone else gets the chance.
This is my nest. I have been tied to its fate just as long as the fledglings
themselves.
There is, and has never been,
the need for a harness or ropes here, I merely karabiner the small drawstring
bag and fishing rod to my shorts along with a strong torch and skip up the tree
as has become my custom.
Once again I eclipse the
entrance of the nest. The fledgling is still there. He glances up from the
bottom as sceptical as ever and, sensing my intent, hurriedly toddles into the
darkest, most in accessible corner he can find. To find such a corner in a
round tree trunk is a skill that no human possess. It is as if he has cast a
spell and has simply disappeared, apart from the glint of his emerald tail
feathers in the torch light.
The ensuing time is somewhat
of an adrenalin and sweat filled blur. It could have been 5 minutes (although I
am reliably informed it wasn’t) or it could have been 5 hours (which I am
reliably informed it wasn’t). The time,
however long it was, is passed using the metal wire with a kink in the end and
the full span of my arm attempting to break his invisibility spell. Gently corralling
him into the visible spectrum of his nest the aim is to then hook his leg in
the kink and drag him kicking and screaming into the real world.
Rest assured that whilst this
may have the same effect as receiving your first real bill for something in adult
human life; i.e. there is much screaming and panic, there is little chance of
physical harm to the bird as their legs are designed to support their weight at
any angle.
There are (more than) a few
attempts made to bring the bird into the real world. However the bird shrieks
at the very idea before, with a swift flourish, slipping his leg out of the shepherds
crook and with a disgruntled *whump* and toddling back to his corner.
Eventually I succeed and
suddenly I am face to face shrieking struggling bird, uttering howls of anger
that would cower a wolf, pausing only to inhale with a noise that sound very much
like a rubber chicken.
In this second I am keenly
aware I am 12 feet off the ground with no safety lines holding the most
precious thing I have ever held. I have to get his wings. He could do himself
much harm if he continues to flap and struggle wildly.
I hesitate, he does not.
For all the years I have
worked with Psittaciformes this is the first time I have had to grab a completely
wild bird. The knowledge of their bite force is at the front of my mind. If I
hesitate anymore he will get loose and possibly fall, I couldn’t bear it.
I grab him. He grabs me.
The bite is strangely
reassuring. It feels that despite the lack safety ropes someone has me and I am
safe.
I open the drawstring bag and
tuck the still snarling bird inside. He releases my thumb and falls quiet.
I sigh and gently pass him to
the ground crew who I have quite forgotten about despite their constant vocal
input. I return, shakily to the ground, sweating from the battle.
He is then gently handled, but
kept hooded and with wings pinned at all times. He is banded, one colour for
location, one colour, silver, for the 2013 season.
After banding he is swiftly returned
to the nest. After a brief argument over ownership of the drawstring bag there
is one last *whump* followed by the
soft sound of swiftly toddling feet working an invisibility spell.
I return the next day to make
check one last time on the Heartwood nest.
It is empty.
The Bonairean population of
Yellow-shouldered Amazons has one new member.
That is not the end of my
frantic two weeks. Climb follows climb
follows marathon across grueling terrain as we desperately search the other
nests but it is, for the most part, too late.
All are gone. 3 nests at least, I suspect, were taken by poachers, the
rest have joined the rest of us in the sun and wind to try their hand at life
as “grown-ups.”
But there is one nest left. And
from within comes a growl that could cower a wolf punctuated with the sound of
a rubber chicken.
The last three fledglings of
the 2013 season.
They were my companions on my
last work day and we spend a pleasant evening fishing together.
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