Freedom Projects

It was freedom projects for our family this week.

Jeb and the Bohemian built our little chick, Merlin, a more spacious, outdoor dwelling (I know I keep writing about that tiny guy, and yes, he is still missing). And while they worked with wood and a drill, I was under the kukui tree with an orchid plant and some clippers.

What I thought was a simple re-potting project, became an intricate exercise in disentanglement.

Orchids don’t need much soil. But they do like to attach their roots to rocks and other earthen materials. Pulling this one’s complex root system – a coiled, compact replica of the pot it had been living in – I discovered that there were two more mesh containers embedded at its core. Roots bulged in the confines of double layers – a pot within a pot – in a maze of winding tendrils encircling their encasement.

2013-03-28orchid_roots

There was only one way to free the plant, and that was to clip the mesh, piece by piece, and delicately remove it from the roots that held them there.

For about an hour I sat like a surgeon in the dirt, trying to clip plastic rather than root.

Maybe in the early days, that black mesh had served this young orchid starting out. But over time, the plant had outgrown the vessel, leaving it to simply merge with its trappings. So much so, that the plastic was imbedded in the root.

My work was patient, but inevitably, there were times my clippers could not access particular cuts with precision. Some roots got slashed. But slowly, in half-inch shards of clip, clip, clip, black bits fell away and the orchid was freed of synthetic material.

I was careful as I handled my botanical friend. Leaves, roots, and its one, flowering stalk of white, were all fragile and often brittle to the touch. Too rough a swipe and any of these appendages could be lost.

Merlin the chick was toggling back and forth between the housing project with Jeb and the Bohemian and the bug buffet in the soil by my kneecaps. I lifted some decaying banana leaves (like any mother hen would do) to show him a cornucopia of choices.

Occasionally a rich, fragrant scent would rise to my nose, coming in periodic waves of sweet flowering. In the moment, my clippers meticulously trimming, it seemed quite clear that this was orchid communication.

Merlin the chick, tweeted away, pecking at small ants. And the orchid in my hand let off wafts of ambrosia in sighs of…gratitude, perhaps? The relief of freedom with every root unleashed.

Hopefully, I didn’t gnash too many stems in my process of freeing the orchid. It’s in a roomy pot now, stretching out with loose kukui nuts and coconut husks.

As for Merlin, maybe we tried to give him his upgrade too soon. He disappeared from that new home the very next day, never to be seen since.

It’s a delicate balance, knowing when we’ve outgrown old ways and the process of freeing ourselves for greater expansion. Sometimes the heft of a chainsaw is required, other times, the fine-tune of tweezers.

We each have our proverbial hen house on the horizon. And we probably all have some entanglements with outmoded containers. Somewhere in the middle, is right now.

Clip, clip. Tweet, tweet. The smell of an orchid bloom and the happy song of a baby bird.

Maybe we are all just freedom projects in process.

Sweet and Sour

There is a flash flood warning in effect on Kauai. Rains pour down, bridges close, and Merlin (our little chick) is still gone without a trace.

There is a noticeable void here without our feathered friend. His little trills and watchful eyes. The sweet nature he exuded. He was one rare bird.

This past weekend, the Bohemian and I watched the movie “Vanilla Sky“, Cameron Crowe‘s 2001 adaptation of Alejandro Amenábar‘s “Abre los Ojos” (Open Your Eyes).

Says the character who has seen a lot of disappointment, to the one who has lived a more silver spoon existence:

“…one day you’ll know what love truly is. It’s the sour and the sweet. And I know sour, which allows me to appreciate the sweet.”

To the sweet and sour of life…

mango
mango
lemon
lemon

 

Missing Merlin

“Merlin is missing!!”

That’s my text message yesterday afternoon to the Bohemian, though I know he is most likely far from his phone. I’m standing in our yard, in the rain, next to our chicken’s newly built (and empty) house.

There is no sign of disturbance. The door is still secured with the ties, just as I’d left them. But Merlin is gone.

The next two hours are a slow unraveling. First are the thoughts that’s he’s in the nearby vicinity. I call his name, walk through the wetness to nearby trees, check the garden. I think about how when I find him, I will scoop up that little chick and wrap him in a towel. Get him underneath a heat lamp.

Forty-five minutes later, I’m soaking wet. My eyes have scanned grass clumps and been fooled by countless, dark, Merlin-sized leaves on the ground. Every bird that sings in the drizzle seems to echo at least one chickadee note that squeezes my heart. I strain my ears to sort out what may be his call to me.

There are three cats on the property, not really ‘owned’ by anyone, who lounge here to be fed by our neighbors. They are birders, for sure.

One watches my search, stealthily, from its rooftop perch. The other two linger by the laundry room, following me with strange eyes. I see one lone, small feather by the door. It could be Merlin’s. It could belong to a feral chicken that came to the cat food dish for a snack.

After two hours of searching the acre and a half of our property, I’ve cried three times and begun to accept that Merlin is simply gone.

I can’t help but think that if anyone can find him, the Bohemian can. And when he gets home, we search together, for another hour. The bird songs trick his ears too. I see him go to the same chick-shaped leaves I did, and I watch his hopefulness turn to resign, just like mine.

At a certain point, I pick marigolds and tarragon blossoms and put them at the “Merlin’s House” sign that Jeb made. I make a wish for Merlin.  That wherever he may be, that he is comfortable and in peace.2013-03-25MerlinsHouse

Inside the house we eat warmed up left overs with heavy hearts. We rarely drink, but the Bohemian opens up a bottle of French red and pours us each a glass. Jeb is with his dad this night. It’s just the two of us that toast to Merlin. The little chick that wandered into our life exactly two weeks ago.

His tiny peeps have been such a constant with us these last days, we both keep thinking we hear him as we sit sipping our wine. But as night comes on and the outdoor sounds quiet, we realize the Merlin chirps are just echoes in our heads.

If I was not me, if I was you, perhaps, I would think this all a bit melodramatic. There was a baby chick. Fine. They come a dime a dozen (yes, there can be a dozen hatched and digging in your garden bed with mama hen). As I have said, the locals call them ‘rats with wings’. They are invasive, loud and messy.

If I were you, I may be thinking this all got a little out of hand. A chick in a box in the living room. Given a name. Taken to the beach. The subject of photos, as if it were a family member. I understand if we seem crazy.

He was a chicken for goodness sake.  But there was something truly different about him.  And this surprised me. And even more surprising, was that I came to love that bird, despite myself. He had such a genuine sweetness and all he really wanted was to be with us. As long as we were within his view, he was content.

To be clear, we never wanted to make Merlin a ‘pet.’ We understood that he was a chicken and we wanted him to live his life as such. The time being handled by us in his early chick life, the days inside his small box, were just to nurture him through his most vulnerable time so that he could feather and fly into the big, wide world in all his chickenness.

Hence, the Bohemian and Jeb built him a house, where he would be safe from cats and other wild chickens, but could begin living life outside in the sun. Eating bugs, feeling the breeze. Eventually, as he grew, the door to his coop would be open and he could come and go as he pleased.

He just left earlier than we had planned.

Last night, as our search turned futile, I sifted through my grief and regret to try to find some reason why our family was having this experience. The Bohemian and I sat with our wine glasses and miso soup, reflecting on the impact this little bird had on our lives.

One thing Merlin taught me was a deep lesson about compassion. For years, I’ve observed the wild chickens, especially the roosters, with disdain. It’s not as if I would accelerate my car if I saw one in the road, but I wouldn’t drive with extreme care either. Now, with a little fluffy, tender chick in my grasp, I had a new perspective on their vulnerability. I watched mothers with their babies and  saw chickens in the yard as families, not just pests.

Merlin gave me new eyes and a more open heart. I’m not saying this diminishes the fact that Kauai has an out-of-control chicken population. I’m just saying I see these animals a little differently, because I connected with one.

If you say to someone that a bomb was dropped in a distant country, they may feel sad, or even, possibly indifferent, if they have no connection to that country. But should you tell someone connected to that place, someone who’s walked those streets, met its people, eaten the food, seen its buildings – they would be much more affected to hear the news of its destruction.  And much more likely to try to end the war there.

Where there is connection, there are fewer enemies.

I don’t want to spend much time writing about the guilt I feel in my part of Merlin’s disappearance. Merlin was young and vulnerable and completely trusting his life to us. The Bohemian and I discussed at length our decision to try him in his new coop and we carefully tested the door, feeling confident he could not get out. We may have been wrong in our assessments, but we did our very best.

After plenty of sadness last night, the Bohemian looks to the positive,  saying, “Well, Merlin got an extra two weeks of life he wouldn’t have had, otherwise. And he had a really great time with us. You know, he got a bonus!”

I guess it’s true.  And it does help a bit to look at it this way.

Little did I know yesterday when I posted to the Weekly Photo Challenge “Future Tense”, that my image of Merlin’s House and my words about how it was time to “fly the coop” would be so ironically prophetic.

I did not know what the future truly held for my life with Merlin. That as I walked him to his coop yesterday morning, it would be the last time I felt the soft fluff of his little feathers.

These small treasures are ever-fleeting.  Reminders to receive with full and open hearts and expanded minds.

Enjoy them while they are present. Release with gratitude when they are gone.

I’m going to miss that little bird.

2013-03-26Merlin