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Slim Randles' Home Country
 
            Small, but important, miracles 
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            [September 22, 2014]  
			
			When 
			we first noticed the baby sparrow, here at the house, it saddened us 
			all. He had fallen from his nest and was slowly walking around the 
			front yard under the tree while his mother and father had an 
			absolute fit.  | 
        
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			 We knew we were looking at a dead baby bird, as it was only a 
			question of who does it, where it is done, and how long before it 
			happens. Years of experience in these kinds of things have taught us 
			the finality of a baby bird falling out of a tree. Would the end 
			come from a cat, or from a raccoon wandering up from Lewis Creek, or 
			a snake? One of the problems with being a baby bird is that almost 
			everything with teeth wants to eat you, and if you can’t fly, 
			there’s not much you can do about it. We learned that picking the 
			baby up and putting him back in the nest wouldn’t work, so we were 
			forced to just watch his timid movements around the yard and whisper 
			to him, “I’m sorry, pal.” 
			 You might think that the older we get, the tougher our shells become 
			to these little natural tragedies, but it doesn’t seem to work that 
			way. Maybe it’s because we’ve now had children of our own, and 
			grandchildren, too. Maybe that’s why it actually hurts more to see a 
			helpless baby bird today than when we were 11 and riding our bikes 
			on the river trails. Back then we were bulletproof, flexible, and 
			immortal. But we learned things over the years. We saw people our 
			age die. We saw younger people die. We accumulated our own little 
			collection of personal tragedies.
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			 Then the baby found the drain spout. Yep, that 
			little rascal hopped into the drain spout coming off the roof and 
			had sense enough to stay in there, coming to the edge of his “cave” 
			only for meals from his anxious mother. A week later, I thought I 
			recognized him sitting on a tree branch, looking smug. He wasn’t in 
			the drain spout and I didn’t see any feathers around on the ground.
 We live in an age of small, but important, miracles.
 [Text from file received from 
			Slim Randles] 
			 
			
			
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