The Glacier Bird
By luigi_pagano
Fri, 23 Oct 2020
- 1565 reads
8 comments
1 likes
The Diuca finch builds its nest
inside glaciers with trepidation.
The bird has found it is best
to raise the chicks in isolation
because like this they keep at bay
unwanted, aggressive, intruders
like hot-blooded birds of prey
or ill-intentioned sharpshooters.
Two eggs are laid in April or May,
the young leave the nest in July.
Before fledging they will stay
secluded until they can fly.
But rearing a family is no fun;
if the slow-moving mass of ice
starts to melt under the sun
it may be a fool's paradise.
What they need is a frozen clime
to enable them to survive.
They have to race against time
otherwise they will nosedive
towards imminent extinction.
Yet ecologists hold on
to the absolute conviction
that the breed will live on.
© Luigi Pagano 2020
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Comments
I really hope this beautiful
Permalink Submitted by skinner_jennifer on
I really hope this beautiful little bird does go on to thrive and the ice doesn't continue to melt.
I'd never heard of the glacier bird before Luigi, so thank you for sharing this piece.
Jenny. xx
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1 User voted this as great feedback
Liked this Luigi, I worry
Permalink Submitted by onemorething on
Liked this Luigi, I worry about all creatures who rely on snow and ice. Sweet little birds. x
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Gosh, how do such tiny things
Gosh, how do such tiny things stay warm, in glaciers? You and Onemorething, bards of birds :0)
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Just amazing!
Just amazing! I wonder if this is the little snowbird Elvis sang of? Are there others?
See you Luigi! Tom Brown
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