Published Sept 2018 in Nanaimo Magazine and Voyager Magazine
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When animal predators are around, birds will suddenly be very quiet. At other times, for example, if an owl is present, many birds will all-at-once start squawking very loudly. They are warning all the other birds to take heed and of course, they are attempting to discourage the owl from harming them. Recently while I was painting in a lovely wooded area, I was visited by a little wren. Initially, I could hear it chirping and moving around in the tree branches above my head, but I couldn’t see it at first. As I continued to paint, it flew down onto a moss-covered stump right beside me.
It was a pretty little bird with a rusty beige head and back. It had a soft looking white chest with a white line above its eye. Its tail was swept upward. The little wren just sat on the thick green moss for a couple of minutes, looking at me in a quizzical way.
It would be fascinating to know what the little wren was thinking or to be able to communicate with it somehow. Perhaps I was, and I didn’t even know it! It is often the small gifts that give us the most pleasure in life. For a brief moment, a little wren visited me. “In every walk with nature, one receives far more than he seeks.” John Muir. Happy painting!