Could I make some kind of tent with that giant piece of carpet padding? Was there a possibility of using some old flats from a play as a barrier?
But the truth is, I am a totally unhandy person. And even if I did figure something out, what if my jerry-rigged barrier blew over on her? Then I would have been the one responsible for doing her in. So I just sat there in my studio, trying to get my taxes done, while obsessively watching my little bird whipping around in the pouring rain and wondering how she could possibly stand it. I considered taking a video of Mummy Hummer's Wild Ride, but it was just too terrifying to want to share the experience.
Finally the darkness came, and the wind died down. I went to sleep, praying the wind was finished with us and I would see Mummy H when I awoke.
And I did.
But it seemed to me that her tail feathers looked askew. Oh no! Had she gotten injured when she left the nest for a sip of nectar?!? I took a photo and then scrutinized it compared to a photo from before the storm. It seemed to me her tail feathers DID look different. Was she now going to pathetically flop instead of zooming?
I worried about that for as long as I could, studying the two photos. By the end of the day, I had to admit that she was in fact leaving the nest, was not seen by me flopping on the ground, and was perhaps okay. Phew.
Then I decided the one thing I could do for my long-suffering tiny Mom was to buy a hummingbird feeder so she wouldn't have to fly too far for a snack. I had never put up a feeder before, because you have to clean it twice a week or it becomes a source of fungus that is harmful to the little beings you're trying to help. I never felt up for the responsibility. But now that I had an emotional relationship with a hummer, I did. |
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