Saturday, March 24, 2018

Field Trip

I absolutely love my grandchildren. They all know that when they ask a favor of their Poppi, they will get one of two answers. Yes, I would love to or absolutely not. One thing I have never....ever done is said yes to a school field trip. At the risk of sounding rather chauvinistic, that is something MeMa does. However when ten year old Taeya told her mother that her next field trip was to a bird sanctuary she neglected to pass all this knowledge on to her poor misinformed mother. When I received the text from my daughter-in-law I didn’t want to embarrass the poor thing so was forced to say, “I would love to.”

Have you ever noticed how much oxygen 30 some children suck out of a large bus? Well I am here to tell you those little devils had no idea that this old gardener was suffering. The bus trip lasted about fifteen minutes. Smith and Bybee Wetlands is a hidden gem completely hidden within an industrial park. The excited students were met by a group of volunteers from the Audubon Society that broke us into smaller groups.

Since it is a wetland I was not surprised that the first bird spotted was our national bird the Bald Eagle, perched high in a tree watching over us. My cell phone makes him look like a dark blob in the tree. If you click on the photo it will make him look like larger dark blob in the tree.


We saw several Greater Blue Herons like this one hunting frogs.

Dead fish in the woods, no water in sight.
An Osprey’s intended meal that got away, unfortunately both hunter and prey suffered. One left without a meal and the other without water to swim away in.


The children were very excited when they spotted this young garter snake.


When this old gardener finally made it back to the student filled bus I was quite surprised to hear my granddaughter Taeya’s (fourth smile from left) voice, along with three of her friends all yelling “Poppi we saved you a seat back here with us.”  

6 comments:

  1. Sounds like a wonderful trip and your granddaughter was, obviously thrilled to have her Poppi there.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The placement of the sanctuary was amazing.

      Delete
  2. Well, there’s a first time for everything. Looks like it went just fine—better than just fine judging by the smiles on those cutie-pies’ faces.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Methinks you had as much fun as the kids. What a sweet grandpa you are. I wondered what the herons eat. I kind of thought fish.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks Donna, I did actually enjoy it very much. Herons do eat fish and just about anything else in water. Frogs are high on the list in spring because they return to the water to spawn.

      Delete