I had four baby Meeps the last time we visited. On Monday, the fifth baby hatched. It was hard to believe how much the babies grew just in the course of two days. In my hand are two little babes. Can you see the difference?
Tuesday, I lost two babies.
Then
I lost a third one. I don’t remember what day that was.
I
was left with the newborn and an older one.
It
was bad enough that Meep and Meepette weren’t feeding the babies, it got worse
when all of the babies were hatched and they weren’t even keeping them warm. I took
them out of the nest for a feeding and they were cold to the touch.
How
am I going to keep them warm‽
I wondered.
And
the only thing I could think of was to put them next to my skin. I cradled them
in a gauze square and tucked ‘em down in my bra pocket. You know, the space
between my girls. That’s a euphemism for my breasts. Every time I had to bend
down or bend over, I had to clutch my front so they didn’t tumble out.
Those
stinkers. It didn’t take them long to scoot themselves around until they were
between my breast and my bra. I repositioned them several times, but they just kept
going back. I don’t know if it was the warmth or the security that drew them. I
just gave up and let them be where they wanted to be.
Unfortunately,
when I pulled them out to feed them, the littlest baby was dead — warm, but
dead. I don’t know if he suffocated or got pinched by a fat roll when I bent
over to pick something up or if I broke his neck clutching my front or if I did
it when I took him out. However it happened, he was gone.
I
felt bad.
And
I didn’t want it to happen again.
Don’t laugh at the solution this dumb
butt came up with. In fact, when I was telling my friend Jody about it, I
laughed at the ridiculousness of it so hard tears streamed from my eyes and
rolled down my face.
What if I put something over him to keep me from breaking
his neck? Of all the ways he could've died, I thought it was my fault.
My
turtle shell that fits inside my face mask came to mind but I thought it was
too big.
I
took a little cup from the cupboard, tucked a piece of cloth inside, and popped
the little dude in my bra so he could lay against my skin.
About four minutes later a horrifying thought pops into my head.
How’s
he gonna breathe‽
Quickly
I pulled him out. He took a huge breath and lay still.
I
killed him!
“Come
on!” I said and poked him. He took another breath and was still. “You can do
it,” I encouraged and actually started CPR. Can you imagine! There I was, feeling
like the lowest of the low, scum of the earth even, because he wouldn’t be dead
except for my stupidity.
“I
really didn’t think it through,” I told Jody.
There I stood, at
my kitchen counter, with a half or mostly-dead baby bird cupped in my hand and
I’m tapping his little chest with my index finger, poking him, rolling him
over.
I was mimicking the
motions as I told Jody the story.
I stopped to see
if he was breathing. He took another breath, wiggled a wing, then was still
again. I kept up the tapping and poking at him, rolled him over then back
again, more taps, then I got really close and exhaled a big breath on him.
It was at this point in telling the story that I lost it. I could only imagine what Jody must think of an old woman
giving mouth-to-mouth to a four-day-old baby bird.
Honestly, it was
all I could think of to do.
That and pray.
I know! I know!
It’s silly to pray over a baby bird that doesn’t have much of a chance of living anyway
but I know that God cares for all of His creation — and that includes birds.
I’d stop every
ten seconds or so to see how he was doing. After a couple of minutes, he
took a breath, then another, then another.
He was breathing!
Then he started flopping around.
I
never felt so relieved, and thankful, in all my life.
I need to keep him safe and warm, rattled around in my
head for a couple of hours. Then, what temperature does he need?
I
started typing in the search on my phone. It has intuitive words that will pop
up as you type so oftentimes you don’t even have to finish writing a word before
the right one pops up, then you choose it.
What
temp to keep baby... I typed. When I hit z I had to laugh at the
suggestions that came up. Zombies. Who wants to know what temperature to keep
baby zombies at? I finished with Zebra Finches.
Different
websites tell you different things. One said 85 to 90 another said 90 to 96. So
I figured 80 to under 100 should work. The only thing I have that’s low temp is
a yogurt maker. Plus it has a lid so the cats won’t get him. Google says the
temperature for making yogurt is 98 to 109 degrees. So that’s maybe a little
hot for my baby. But maybe I could put a bowl and towel in and keep him off the
bottom. And I’ll get Mike to drill holes in the top to vent the heat.
The
next thing I needed was a thermometer. I have several different thermometers in
the house that would fit inside the yogurt maker. A refrigerator thermometer, a
people thermometer, and a meat thermometer. The refrigerator thermometer only goes to 80.
The people thermometer starts at 95.5. The meat thermometer had the best range.
I
set the yogurt maker up, put the refrigerator and people thermometers inside,
put the lid on, slid the meat thermometer in one of the holes Mike made, and waited
an hour.
It
was over a hundred.
Maybe
if I keep it off the bottom, I think.
I
swapped out the bowl for a large steamer basket.
It
worked great until I put the lid on. Then it was too hot.
I
swapped out the steamer basket for a splatter screen.
“Move
the lid off the side,” Mike suggested. “Then it’ll draw cool air.”
The
fridge thermometer said it was over 80. The meat thermometer said it was 86.
Perfect!
I
put the baby in. He snuggled up to a fold in the cloth and seemed happy.
I
checked him after twenty minutes or so and he seemed fine.
Forty-five
minutes later, when I went to feed him, he had scooted himself halfway across
the screen, his mouth was open, panting, his little wings were held away from
his body, all the signs that he was too hot!
I
snatched the lid off, grabbed my hand-held fan, and started fanning him. Once
he had cooled off some, I gave him a cool drink.
Trying
to figure out a brooder for Meepling was an all-day adventure and ultimately, a
wasted day.
“Meepling?”
you say.
Yep.
That beautiful Jenn Kipp came up with that, and I love it.
That
night I put Meepling back in the house and the house back in the bird cage. It
didn’t take long for Meep and Meepette to go in.
The
next morning, Mike was up an hour or so before me. The first thing I did was
check on the birds. Meep and Meepette were out of bed, sitting on a perch.
Usually, they don’t get up until I turn on the kitchen light. I pulled my
little ladder out, climbed the two steps, opened the door, and took out the
house. Meepling was cool to the touch, but alive. I warmed him with my breath,
then I warmed his food and fed him. I wiped his little face where I’d gotten
food on him and tucked him into my bra pocket.
“Do
you think they got up with you?” I asked Mike, but it was rhetorical.
I did more research on brooders.
“My
dad used a light bulb and a box when he had chicks,” my feisty redheaded neighbor
said.
And
that was one of the things I saw online. I don’t even know if we have a bulb
that’s not an LED. And Meepling is tiny. Maybe an inch and a half long, so I
wouldn’t need a very big box, then figure out how to hook the bulb up and not
get too hot and keep the cats out. All things that needed to be considered, and
frankly, it seemed like a lot of work when I already had a consistent heat
source readily available.
“You could buy one?” you say.
Nope
and nope.
I don’t need nor
do I want a bunch of baby birds. I wouldn’t mind one or two more but only if
Meep and Meepette would do their jobs. Then I’d separate boys and girls. If Meepling
lives then he can live in the cage I already have and I’ll make it so there’s
no place to lay eggs.
“That little
stinker keeps scooting himself around until he gets under my boob,” I told my
handsome son when we talked this week.
“You could make a
little pocket for him,” Kevin suggested.
A light bulb went
off in my head. “Yes, I could!”
I cut some fabric
and used my hot glue gun to do up the side seams. Now Meepling has to stay in
his little pocket.
When I put
Meepling to bed that night, Meep and Meepette went inside almost right away. I’m
so glad because I can’t keep him warm at night. Before I went to bed, I checked
on them. Nothing had changed, I hadn’t turned any lights on, but Meep and Meepette
were NOT in the house. Instead, they were sleeping on the top rung of their ladder.
I worried all
night.
I worried I’d
have a baby ice cube when I got up.
Nonetheless,
there was nothing I could do about it.
In the morning,
Meep and Meepette were still on the ladder, Meepling was cool to the touch but
alive.
“You could make a
rice sock and warm it in the microwave for him,” Jenn suggested.
That’s a great
idea. I’ll have to let that one rattle around in my head.
All I’ve got to say is that after being abandoned by his parents, almost suffocated, and nearly cooked to death, this little guy has a strong will to live!
Getting up early to take care of the baby gave me a chance to catch a sunrise.
Tuesday it rained a good part of the day. When Mike and I went to collect and deliver the mail for our neighbors, we saw a herd of deer bedded down in Vernon’s field.
That evening, when I went out to my CDI class, there were deer bed down in our yard.
That got me to wondering. Do the deer stay put when it rains?
Across my Facebook feed, came this
lady who says this is her new favorite snack and she eats it every day.
“Take
a rice cake,” she says, “and I know some of you don’t like rice cakes, but I
promise, you’re gonna love this!”
She
put a gob of cottage cheese on, dotted hot sauce around, and sprinkled
Everything Bagel seasoning on it.
I
gave it a try.
I’m not crazy about the flavor of Tabasco
but you know what? I’ve made it twice more since then. Maybe I’ll try it with jalapeno
peppers next time. Those I like!
I caught Bondi and Blackie canoodling in the recliner — and it’s not the first time either! Bondi seems to like it when Blackie grooms her.
Mike’s lap is the favorite place of
this handsome guy. Every night, Tiger waits for Mike to get in his recliner so
he can have some snuggle time.
Sometimes, Tiger stretches out lengthwise on Mike’s chest, reaches up, and touches his face.
There’s nothing better than when a critter wants to be no other place than with you.
I
caught a sunset for you, too.
Let’s call this one done.
No comments:
Post a Comment