This entry was posted on 6/13/2007 9:47 AM and is filed under uncategorized.
Tuesday June 12 2007
Last year in the spring, 3 little Ravens

fell out of their nest along Pickett Creek. Neighbor Linda (now next
door to Carol, who's next door to us) found them after a windstorm blew
them out of their nest. They were sitting on the ground on the bridge
over the creek on her new property. The parents were still trying to
feed them, but the little ravens were sweltering in the heat,
dehydrated, and in very bad shape. Linda called up Carol next door, who
drove over in her black pickup; they bundled up the little ravens, and
drove a few miles downstream to Linda's (now old) house. The parent
ravens were frantic, watching Carol's truck drive away with their
babies, but, without human intervention, it was quite clear the little
ravens would have died very soon.
Linda and Carol used
eyedroppers to get water down them, and Linda kept them at her house.
Carol drove home, and later in the day got back in her pickup to drive
into town, and the parent ravens followed her truck all the way down
the creek into Oreana – she said it was quite eerie. “How they could
tell my black truck from her blue truck, and know the babies had been
in mine, was amazing.” They eventually figured out their babies were at
Linda's place.
Linda, and her partner Mike, and Carol all
pitched in to feed the baby ravens

– at first dog food soaked into a
mush, and bird food, which is higher in protein, and eventually just
about anything, including chicken, and tuna, “the smellier the better.”
At first Linda kept them inside as they needed to be fed
several times a day, and she even took them to an endurance ride or
two, because the hungry babies needed to be fed constantly. “They were
all mouth,” said Carol, “big pink mouths,” which must be their
attractant for the parents to put food right in the target – down their
throats. Eventually Linda kept them outside in a big cage, till they
were able to hop and flap around. By that stage, they were no longer so
tame they'd sit in Linda's hands, but they would land on Linda's and
Mike's heads.
Linda has a big menagerie of dogs and goats and
horses and mules; the ravens were just another part of the family.
Eventually, one of the ravens disappeared, and they never saw it again.
Later in the summer, Mike and Linda found one drowned in a water
trough, a very sad event.
That left Hoss. Hoss the Raven kept
hanging around, getting fed, growing up with the farm animals. One day
he was gone, and later that day another neighbor further down the creek
toward Oreana called, “Linda, I have your Raven!” She said he looked
disoriented and was hungry, so she fed him dog food. When Linda showed
up with her bowl of treats, she said Hoss was so happy to see her, he
followed Linda right to her truck and flew back home with her. He was
still so starved when they got home, Linda kept feeding him... and
feeding him. “He just kept eating, so I just kept feeding him. I mean,
what the heck.” The next day, Hoss was gone, seemingly for good.
That
might have been the end of the Picket Creek Raven stories, but months
later, Hoss returned. Of course, all Ravens look pretty much alike to
human eyes, but this had to be Hoss, because he'd hang out at Linda's
place on the fence, or on the goats' backs

, like he always did. He
wouldn't allow himself to be touched anymore, but he'd hang out much
closer than any other raven might have, and he was unbothered by human
presence. And, he seemed to have brought a girlfriend with him.
Carol
says he's still hanging out in this valley – often it's the two of
them. Hoss or both of them will stop by her place early in the mornings
and croak and caw a while. She'll also often see a Raven or two when
she's out riding, and he'll often come quite close. She's sure it's
Hoss, coming to check on her.
The first time I took a horse out
riding when I got back here this visit, I saw a raven alight on a
hillside. It really looked like he was doing nothing but watching me,
so I yelled, “Hi Hoss!” at him. Another time Carol and I were riding,
and we saw a raven circling high above. I yelled, “Hi Hoss!” again, and
the raven flew down to have a look at us. It might not have been Hoss,
because sometimes Ravens can be quite curious, but chances are, it was
him, because there aren't that many ravens that hang around this
drainage. Once a day or so, I see 2 ravens hanging out in one
particular dead tree by our creek. I go out there to right under the
tree with my camera, saying, “Hi Hoss!” The two look at me, and go
about their raven business, cawing and hollering, preening, ducking
from little birds or kestrels that are quite perturbed they are hanging
out in the wrong spot.
We humans think we are so smart, that
we have everything figured out. We forget that we take and take and
take from the planet, things that will never be replaced, and things
that just won't continue to sustain us with our steadily growing
population – do the simple math. Carol and I have always thought that
as soon as we humans destroy ourselves and the planet, the Ravens will
inherit the earth. They are the clever ones. They've been out there
since the creation of the earth (they are mentioned in the Bible
several times; it was Ravens that fed Elijah in the wilderness), and
they'll be around long after we've taken everything till there's
nothing left for us, and they'll still be having a great time. I can
only think that we Pickett Creek humans all have good Raven karma,
through Linda's and Carol's good raven deeds, (and through my obsession
with Ravens), so who knows, maybe we'll get to come back as Ravens one
day...
P.S. The great photos are all from Linda and Mike and/or Carol!
http://www.endurance.net/merri/stories/2007/06/three-little-ravens.html