Sister Rain’s Note:
In July 2015 I began a series of posts about Piper, my now 17-year-old orange-fronted conure (a type of parrot) who adopted Mister Rain and me when he was 6. I don’t intend to republish previous content on this site but I think the story of Piper and me is worth retelling to all who are new to Sister Rain. During the next several Fridays I will repost the Love Story chapters I had written almost nine years ago. Rest assured, there is a lot more where these came from. There always is when you’re talking about the great loves of your life.
To read Piper & Me: A Love Story (Part1-3), click here.
To read Piper & Me: A Love Story (Part 4-5), click here.
To read Piper & Me: A Love Story (Part 6), click here.
To read Piper & Me: A Love Story (Part 7), click here.
To read Piper & Me: A Love Story (Part 8), click here.
PART 9
Originally Published September 7, 2015
August 26, 2012
During the two-hour drive home from A Helping Wing Parrot Rescue & Sanctuary with our new boy, Piper, already his unique personality began to emerge. If you don’t know birds, let me set the record straight about bird brains. Birds are sextremely smart, each have their own unique character traits. As soon as we placed Piper in his travel carrier, securing him in the front passenger seat, he found his jam. The car hadn’t even been started yet, nor the radio, but Piper grabbed hold of some bars and began “dancing” by rocking side-to-side, at a speed we found impossible to imitate. Believe me, we tried.
My husband drove while I sat in the back so that I could watch Piper. (I was fully sighted then.) He seemed to love being in the car; I kept wondering what he was thinking as well as how many times in his six years of life he had been loaded up and driven to a new home. I thought to myself, “That stops now.”
Piper danced and looked out the window the entire way home. We talked to him throughout, getting him used to our voices, trying to offer comfort, although all signs pointed to an anxiety-free bird. Normally when you bring a new bird home, experts recommend that you put the bird in its mansion (aka cage), but when I mentioned this to the rescue owner, she said with Piper’s disposition that wouldn’t be necessary.
We pulled into our garage. This was it. For the first time in five years, we had a little feathered guy who we had begun to think of as ours a mere six days ago, when I had called the rescue to say we would love to adopt Piper, and they instantly gave their blessing.
We took Piper into the house and opened the travel carrier. He climbed up my arm to my shoulder. He was looking around but seemed completely unworried. We got him fresh water and I stood next to his mansion and he climbed onto it. Less than 24 hours before, the mansion was in a flat box, in pieces, in the back of my car, along with all the food and toys we had bought. And now, the new little man in our lives was in residence, checking things out.
Mister Rain and I sat watching him, tearing our eyes away from him every so often to look at each other. We talked soothingly to Piper as he began to eat. Both of us were remembering the five years since our cockatiel, Cato, had passed away after 15 years with us. We were also thinking about the 25 days between seeing Piper online to bringing him home.
Once again, we were three.
To be continued . . .
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