thorne_scratch: (Default)
thorne_scratch ([personal profile] thorne_scratch) wrote2010-05-05 09:47 am
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I had a match, but she had a lighter

I am not dead. Still buried under work, though.

So, about an hour ago I was hauling ass down Route 123, on my way to work, balefully cursing the potholes under my breath and wondering why it is there is never a single road in Virginia that is not under construction at any given time. It was your usual middle of the week work commute, with the added contemplation of just how drunk it is possible and/or acceptable to become on a Wednesday Cinco de Mayo. When all of a sudden, I see what looks like two largish grocery bags or crumpled boxes in the middle of the road. There are some smaller crumpled things sifting around them. Oh good, I think, something else that can possibly take out my alignment.

But as I get closer, it turns out they are not boxes or bags. They are, in fact, a family of Canadian geese, two adults and four tiny, fuzzy goslings, regally marching their way across the highway.

Any normal hostility I feel towards Canadian geese (damn things used to crap all over the pool and were a bitch to clean up after, though I do give them some reluctant respect. They're part of the "large birds who will immediately fuck shit up in a hilarious way as long as it is not you getting attacked" group that includes geese, swans, ostriches, cassowaries, emus, and [livejournal.com profile] squeemu) was immediately swept away by fond memories of "Make Way for Ducklings!" So I slammed on my brakes and sat in the middle of the road as they waddled their way across my lane. The person in the lane next to me stopped, and threw on their hazards for good measure, and so did the driver in the next lane over, and we all just sat there with goofy smiles and watched the geese do their thing. The parents were each herding two of the goslings, who peeped and scrambled around their feet, clearly asking their parents if there was a pool and cable TV at their eventual destination, and were they there yet.

No one honked (except the geese); no one drove on until they were safely across. It was an unexpected feel-good moment, all the better for coming in the middle of the week and completely out of the blue. I feel a great encompassing fondness towards all humans and avian life forms at the moment. It will have probably faded by the time I leave work today, but for right now, the memory still makes me smile, sitting here at my desk. Happy Cinco de Mayo; may there be tequila for everyone tonight, and no hangovers tomorrow.

Oh yeah, and I also bought a house. Or possibly a small European principality, judging from the check I'm supposed to write. More on that later.

[identity profile] sheraton.livejournal.com 2010-05-05 03:22 pm (UTC)(link)
*Squee* Ducks and ducklings! Thank you for a happy thought. Oh! *Two* happy thoughts. HOUSE OF YOUR OWN how awesome is that? ♥

I think Rissi has ducklings in common with you, but not cars. My only encounter with avian road-crossing involved getting out of the car to convince the young turkeys to move out of the middle of the road and off to safety!

Silly things didn't want to finish crossing; we saw this once a year for about 3 years, I think.

[identity profile] thorne-scratch.livejournal.com 2010-05-05 04:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Hee! Goslings, actually, but still cute. The front page of our paper, a week or so ago, was taken up by a large photo of ducks crossing one of the busier streets in DC. (Every year around this time, there's always some story about the ducks near the Native American Indian Museum, which has a nice pond, getting into mischief. Like, they fall into drains, or down sewer grates, or try to cross the road at rush hour. Ducks, they are not smart. But they are adorable.)

Turkeys, man! That kinda amazes me. And reminds me I accidentally left them off the Large Angry Bird list. Oops.