Today, I had a job to do up at Levi and Mattie's house. They are appealing their property assessment and this requires photos. He asked me if I would do it. Of course, I said yes.
Something about the Amish is that it is a very serious violation to capture their images even accidently. Probably the saddest thing I ever heard was Mattie's story about her father. As he was dying of covid back in the early days of the pandemic, he was in isolation. His family called him on the phone but he longed to see their faces. He said, "I know it is wrong, but I wish I had a picture of my family."
There are things I don't understand about their way of life, but they are good people and I respect them. I don't need to understand. It is their life.
So I was taking pictures of the buildings from all sides, being mindful of where the kids were at. At one point, Rudy came running into the shot. I lowered my phone quickly. Levi sternly admonished Rudy in German.
I assured Levi that I was being mindful. He said, "I know you are, but they don't need to make the job more difficult!"
As we worked our way across the property, photographing the sawmill, the workshop, the barns, the poultry sheds, and the two houses (theirs and the home they built for grandma). As we walked by grandma's house, there was a bit of a ruckus. Grandma found a snake in her beans. Levi got a stick and took care of that.
I waited and I saw the thing that made me sickish the first time I saw it last summer: a sparrow trap. The birds fly into it, triggering a lever which drops them into a wire cage where they are left to die. 8 sparrows fluttered desperate to escape.
Levi and grandma walked over when he was done. They were afraid they had offended me. Thing was, they hadn't. I have killed snakes too close to the house. We have set mousetraps when we needed to. Tim shoots woodchucks in the yard because there are just too many. I have euthenized pets. And really, a woman who eats venison has to acknowledge the circle of life.
But those birds were suffering in the sun.
I said slowly, 'No. I am not offended by the snake. But, Levi, today, I am going to charge you for my work.'
I have never done that before. He looked surprised, but quickly assured me that was fine. I said, 'My price is those birds,' and I gestured to the cage.
Two more shocked people you never saw in your life. Levi said, 'What would you do with them?'
I said, 'I will take them to the new house and set them free.'
Grandma said, 'Don't you have sparrows there, then?' in a truly curious way.
I laughed and admitted that we did. I admitted that I couldn't bear to see things suffer.
I am sure they think I am very peculiar, but when I returned with the photographs a couple hours later, the cage had been moved to the shade. I picked it up and put it in the back of the car and covered it with a blanket to settle the frantic things.
I drove the half hour home and when I got there I set the trap on the garden and opened the door. I watered the garden, and one by one, they left the cage, flying into the trees. The last one hesitated and then flew into the tomato bed, fluttering up and down in the spray in a joyous little dance.
I don't understand their way of life either, but it makes sense to them and they sound like good people. I'm glad you freed the birds. I love birds and hate the thought of them suffering.
ReplyDeleteGrandma offered to give me all that she catches. I said I would surely take them.
DeleteBless you for saving those birds.
ReplyDeletePoor little birds. That would be very hard to see.
ReplyDeleteI wonder why they feel the need to trap them. I can't think of any harm those little birds cause. I don't think they eat produce from the garden, they don't harass chickens, or other fowl. Surely they don't eat enough grain meant for the farm animals, so why do they need to be killed? Maybe some other time, you might gently ask for me?
ReplyDeleteSend me an e-mail to my yahoo account, Ana.
DeleteI am glad you saved them from unwarranted animal cruelty. I hope there isn't a repeat. Kill them, if they must but don't let them suffer as they were.
ReplyDeleteI didn't realize that house sparrows were an invasive species, but I still don't like to see suffering. I'm glad you took them home, and apparently will have many more to release.
ReplyDeleteTim and Debbie's Humane Society. It has a nice ring to it and I would have done the same.
Thank you for saving those sparrows. I expect they had a reason for what they did, and perhaps it's not so easy to carry them far away for release.
ReplyDeleteWe have a number of tropical fish farms here. They are raised in outdoor ponds and the very colorful ones attract birds and they eat them when the fish are small. The farmers either shoot guns over the ponds or fireworks are set of, they are legal for farmers here. I am sure a number of birds are killed also but I have not ask. Of course we have many fireworks set of on holidays, you need to sign a letter saying you are a farmer and need them. Tropical fish are one of the biggest exports out of the Tampa airport.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the Sparrows: Good for you!
ReplyDeleteSo, they're not nice birds. They do take all of the good nesting places and displace native birds. However, leaving them in a cage in the sun is cruel. I'm glad you spoke up.
ReplyDeleteThat made me cry. Thank you for saving them!
ReplyDeleteI am in awe of the Amish tradition of forgiveness. Many times I have seen them forgive a criminal for the act. Not to hate them for what they did, but to forgive and pray for them. And I respect that they can separate this from paying for the crime. They believe that if you do the crime, you pay the penalty, but they don't harbor the grudge. Even for a heinous crime. I am not that person.
ReplyDeleteThat last little sparrow moment truly touched me.
ReplyDeleteSparrows are numerous and pesky, but shouldn't suffer before dieing. Well done for releasing them at your house.
ReplyDeleteI was rather shocked to read about the sparrow incident. They are native birds here and, although they can be quite numerous in some areas, are not considered to be a nuisance. I had never considered it may be different elsewhere.
ReplyDeleteIt was rather shocking about the poor sparrows, definitely not allowed here where most birds are protected. But what a lovely story Debby, you are becoming the Saint Francis of animals. Though you will not be able to get the cats to live happily with the sparrows I think.
ReplyDeleteI knew I had read something like this before. Apparently China ruled that it had four pests in 1955 that needed exterminating - rats, sparrows, flies and mosquitos. Sparrows for eating the crops, or so they thought. Billions were killed but then there was no sparrows to eat the insects. Ecological imbalance!
DeleteWe encourage the sparrows into our garden by feeding them, so I too was shocked to read them being trapped, well done you.
ReplyDeleteThank you for saving those little birds. Made me cry!
ReplyDeleteWhat do they do wrong to be trapped in that way? I thought that the Amish were kindly people.
Sparrows are in decline here, but I realise that they are non-native in the US and can out-compete native birds for food and nesting spots. A trap that kills instantly is one thing, but one in which animals are just left to die is inhumane. Thank you for giving those birds their freedom.
ReplyDeleteYou are going to be overwhelmed with sparrows now!
ReplyDeleteMy heart could not be more full, Debby, reading about your bargain with the Amish and the sparrows. Humans have inflicted suffering upon every being in this world, from the moment we left the primordial water, and by God, it doesn't look like evolution has fixed that, nor ever will. Sigh. If any of us can alleviate the suffering of another being, then it's our duty to do so.
ReplyDeleteI treat sparrows like any other bird, I feed them. I could never be that cruel. However if you are a mouse and you come into my house, might be different. Gigi
ReplyDeleteThat’s a cruel way to deal with the birds, but I don’t know what else would work except for what you have done. Good thinking on your part.
ReplyDeleteYour post, as well as Johns, this morning has caused me to cry but that's okay. It is why the two of you are my favorite bloggers. Thank you for sharing your lives with us.
ReplyDeleteA beautiful piece of writing here today, Debby.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you saved the birds. I wonder why they just don't kill them humanely if they don't want them.
ReplyDeleteMy problem with sparrows is that they kill other birds' and their babies. I had a birdhouse that bluebirds came back to for 3 years, but the next year the sparrows kill the babies and fought with the parents. Now THAT broke my heart.
ReplyDelete