Bird nest by our window
Dr Abe V Rotor
Brown
shrike nestlings (Lanius cristatus) Photos by the author
What a discovery!First time my grandchildren peeped into a bird nest."Lolo Papa," they chorused in awe and joyto see a pair of eggs, "but where is the mother bird?"A bird swooped over our heads shriekingagainst our bold intrusion;It was her home next to our bedroom,only a wall separated her world and our own.Strange neighbors, stranger to each other;to his or her own the primal rule;one day dainty notes rose from the nest,familiar to Mackie and Markus once in their crib.Proud and happy the mother bird was as she sang,bringing food to her offspring,other birds - and children came to this sceneof love and care, awe and wonder.One morning the nest was silent. Deserted.It just hung on the thorny Limonsito by the window.Days passed, a familiar bird came with a flock."Look, Lolo Papa, Look!"I felt like a child again.Brown shrike (Lanius cristatus) is both transient and migratory. It is related to the red-backed shrike (L. collurio) and isabelline shrike (L. isabellinus) and a number of subspecies, thus shrikes are considered cosmopolitan in distribution. Photos show a young and a adult female shrike. My family found joy in watching and listening to this bird - among other birds - in our backyard and the neighborhood where trees of ilang-ilang, talisay, mango and aratilis make a small arboretum of sort.
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