Stella presses her nose flat against the cool window, fingers smearing glass as she watches the squirrels and cars and birds. The leaves fluttering to the ground. A diminutive creek burbling below. Despite cold conditions outside, we are cozy inside a home in Asheville, North Carolina, with endless heat piping through the vents and a comfortable spot at the window where we observe the world together.
She points out a group of pigeons as they land on a large oak. “That’s 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 birdies.”
Stella smacks her tiny hand against the window, and the pigeons hurry off as quickly as they arrived. The birds disappear against an overcast sky. It is a gray world out there this morning, and the cloudy haze seems to cast its pall on all things.
But we are happy in this house. We’re about to go out for breakfast on the final day of our little vacation. My wife is in the bedroom getting ready. I can hear her through the wall humming to herself. I sip my coffee. My daughter eats pretzel sticks one by one. She tells me they’ve got bugs — “buggies” — on them so I won’t steal her pretzels. She thinks that will stop me.
There is a sudden flash of color outside — a stripe of red and black and white.
It’s a bird crawling along the trunk of the big tree right outside the window. But not just any bird. I tell Stella to “wait right there. I’ll be right back,” and I rush to the living room, swiping my glasses off the coffee table. Practically jogging back to our perch at the window, I put my glasses on and gawk at the large pileated woodpecker.
It flies to a nearby branch, deftly dangling upside down as it systematically drills into the wood — intense eyes alert, head and neck shaped like a tomahawk, huge muscular body and claws of a predator.
I grab Stella by the arm, and I’m like “Hey, look! Pileated woodpecker, Stella!”
She turns to me, puzzled — more fascinated by the expression on my face I think than by any bird that could ever alight on a tired oak branch outside. She doesn’t understand why I’m amazed by it. And, returning her gaze it takes me a moment to consider it myself.
To Stella, this is just another bird.
But, thinking back on it, I remember when I was a little boy, not much older than Stella, my own father ignited in me a reverence for this beautiful bird. Distinctly, I recall walking through the woods with him behind my house one fall afternoon, leaves crunching beneath our sneakers, when he suddenly halted, grabbing my shoulder. “Look!”
That flash of red and white and black above was forever stamped in my memory. It was thrilling. For a North Georgia boy obsessed with mysteries and jealous of all the unexplainable phenomena dispensed elsewhere throughout the rest of the world, this was the closest thing I’d ever get to a Bigfoot sighting.
I recall the look of concentration, of unblinking wonder on my father’s face as we silently watched the bird peck away at some bark, eat some bugs and disappear again, just like that. The change in his demeanor was what made it all magical, I think. My father has never been a very openly spiritual man, but I knew in that moment this was his religion. This respect for nature and for the rare jewels it can bestow.
And so as Stella and I watch this brief visitation, I begin to wonder if it will make some subtle mark upon her mind as well. As I ponder this, the pileated woodpecker springs from the tree, wings flapping. It disappears from our view.
I hope she can remember it. I hope she can share an unplanned moment like this with her child or children one day as well. It doesn’t have to be a bird. It can be anything, so long as it means something. Because whether my father realized it or not, the appreciation for this bird was a gift, and nothing less.
As Stella and I sit together looking out the window in Asheville, North Carolina, she picks up a pretzel stick, nibbling off little pieces of salt. She smiles at me. “Birdy.”
Then, correcting herself: “Woodpecker.”