Hey everyone - spring is here in our region! We have tulips, crocuses and hyacinths in bloom now znd tomato seeds are busily percolating under our basement grow-lamp. The migratory birds are returning in droves - or do I mean flocks, murders, parliaments or exhortations? Enjoying nature in spacious outdoor spaces is one of the keys to surviving this pandemic. So this week's donation goes to the building campaign for a new Wild Bird Care centre in the Ottawa area:

https://wildbirdcarecentre.org/build

The existing facility on Moodie Drive is already one of my favourite spaces to soak up a little nature therapy. Chickadees and other birds eagerly swoop down on my outstretched arm and with no effort on my part, I have them literally eating out of my hand. I've seen wild turkeys roaming the area too.

That's just the wide-open-spaces, public enjoyment aspect. But they perform a highly practical service too. Anyone finding an ill or injured bird can bring it to the centre for treatment, rehabilitation and eventual release - all of which obviously requires resources!

But after 40 years on that site, they have outgrown the premises and are looking to raise money for a new improved expanded bird care centre, which will also encompass a substantial public education component. Last I checked, they had achieved approximately 2/3 of their fundraising target, with just under 6 months to get there.
This year has been unusually bad for houseflies. Or maybe good for them but bad for us. We try to keep a fly-swatter or folded newspaper always at the ready. But for the past few months, the newspaper has been pretty thin. On balance, I'd rather deal with the flies than with mice, raccoons, skunks or stinging insects like wasps and yellowjackets, but it's rather disconcerting finding a fly that's drowned itself in your beer. On the plus side: I was nearly finished my beer at the time, the fly died and presumably it died happy. But sometimes I'm truly perplexed by the human hierarchy of how we value, or don't value, the lives of the various animal species.

So far I haven't been served with a summons for causing unnecessary suffering to a house-fly. And unless I come across a fly with a funny white head, I doubt that I will. Still, I'm always reading stuff about attracting bees and other cute insects to your garden. I wonder where my rights leave off and those of other animal species assume priority?

In this summer of the plague, with human health and safety at risk, Bluesfest is holding drive-in concerts. If it helps even in a small way to salvage a major summer festival, then I guess more power to them. But this is far from the first disaster to befall Bluesfest.

Two years ago, Bluesfest narrowly escaped cancellation when killdeers decided to nest along a path right near where the Main Stage was to be set up. Well, turns out killdeers are endangered or threatened or somehow vulnerable as a species. Eventually organizers managed to safely move the nest, inch by inch or centimetre by centimetre until most of the nestlings hatched safely. I won't say outright that I oppose the approach they took, but I do sometimes find myself baffled by how various interest groups decide what's important and what isn't.

I should add here that I'm no great fan of Bluesfest (and in fact have yet to attend it), particularly since it eventually took over Folkfest (later Cityfolk) and made it a shadow of its former self. Not to mention how it always ran concurrently with Music and Beyond (which I've attended every year) and resulted in major parking problems (and in one case a car break-in - I think that was the night the Bluesfest stage blew down) in the downtown core.

I would also point out that I generally avoid harming other animals as much as is, well, humanly, possible. I don't eat meat; we ensured that no raccoons were harmed when they were evicted from our attic and when we needed mousetraps, we used the humane type (although our cat had other ideas). The aforementioned cat, though, admittedly is not fed a vegetarian diet. Cats just aren't designed that way!

One year, we managed to get yellowjackets (which resemble wasps or hornets, at least to a lay-person like me) in one of our backyard compost bins. I didn't perceive much sympathy on the part of those who are supposedly experts. Let them bee - or in this case yellowjacket - seemed to be the gist of it. But when you have curious small children and household pets who like to hang out in My Big Backyard... well, that's not a "solution" I was willing to contemplate. My partner tried turning a hose on the composter-contents at a point after sundown when they seemed relatively dormant - but to no avail. The solution that did finally work (though it took a full season) was to wrap a tarp around the infested composted to smother the creatures. Luckily we had a spare composted to use in the meantime.

So honestly, people. I know Nature as we personify it can seem cruel. But we're part of nature too and we're animals too. It's not against the law to kill animals for food as many people do, with the full knowledge of what we're doing. I say if we just take the time to weigh our options and guard against wanton bloodthirstiness, that's good enough for me.
This morning when I went into the bathroom, there were tiny little ants crawling all around the bathtub. I have no idea why they suddenly decided that our tub would be a great location for a colonial summit. I opted to turn on the tap and relocate them to the Ottawa River, which is probably illegal under some piece of Ministry of Natural Resources legislation. But anyway, they don't seem to have reconvened there so far today - though as Scarlett O'Hara said, tomorrow is another day.

Last summer, we got yellowjackets (wasp-like creatures) in one of composters. Most of the advice I read about that problem was less than helpful, and even downright dangerous! It tended to be along the lines of "Just let them be - they're part of the balance of nature and if you don't bother them, they won't bother you!" But if you have young grandchildren who like to play in the backyard, you don't want those creatures buzzing around. Even if you want to use the composter for its intended purpose by opening the lid and putting in some kitchen scraps, the result is some nasty attacks and stings or near-stings. My partner tried going out with the garden-hose after dark, when the insect-activity had died down, and vigorously spraying into the composter - from a safe distance, of course. But that proved to be only a temporary fix. The most promising piece of advice I discovered - and it seems to have worked - was to wrap a large tarpaulin around the entire composter and basically smother them to death. Over the winter, of course, any possible vestiges of remaining life got frozen away - and supposedly, the creatures never return to the same nesting place twice. Once again, we've probably run afoul of the Ministry of Natural Resources but at least we didn't resort to pesticides or toxic substances. And in this case, we didn't even relocate them! No doubt they died happy.

In most cases, though, we enjoy being close to nature, at least when it's OUTSIDE. We have bird-feeders in the backyard and apparently the birds have been tweeting about our 24-hour buffet. A couple of days ago when daughter and grandchildren were over, we saw some birds with gorgeous plumage - a pair of cardinals, a greenish bird, some with black and white stripes on their wings, as well as more familiar ones like pigeons, sparrows, robins, blackbirds, chickadees and hummingbirds. I don't know if we have any endangered or protected species like barn-swallows or peregrine falcons or wild turkeys. But we get plenty of squirrels, chipmunks and bunny-rabbits. And unlike the good residents of Westboro, we haven't been tempted to trap them and relocate them to Gatineau, either!
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