At a little after 7:00 this morning, we headed out for our walk. After a couple blocks of sunshine and birdsong, Emma decided it was time to relieve herself on the U.S. Customs and Border Protection lawn (shucks, no poop sack 🤷 ). As Zippy and I waited, a crow that’d been on the CBP roof flew down and dropped something furry a few feet from Emma. The crow hopped around as Zippy moved in for a closer look and announced, “It’s a mole.”
For whatever reason, the crow had gifted Emma/us with a dead mole! When we declined the gift (well, Zippy and I declined it without giving Emma a vote) and walked away, the crow picked up the mole and flew back to the CBP roof. That was a first for us. In Colorado, magpies regularly gifted us with pretty stones which we always thought were thanks for the peanut feeders and bird bath we provided. This dead rodent? A gift out of the blue.
Our second gift came later in the walk as we explored a street that was new to us. Suddenly, we were in dense forest where the air was clean and cool.
But it wasn’t only us in the forest. I looked down to see Gift #3 crossing the road:

I have no idea what kind of beetle this is (paging Mara at The Dirty Sneaker!) except that it was at least an inch long.
Later, after a stop at the local bakery for some muffins, we arrived back home where I cut some chard from our garden to add to my smoothie. When I went to wash out my blender, there was Wild Gift #4:
I know, I know. Most people aren’t fans of snails and their slime trails, especially not when they land on their dish cloths as a result of washing garden greens. But snails fascinate me. After watching it move about, I gently carried this one back outside to the flower portion of the garden. Slime away, funny snail!
So that’s my odd gratitude list. In this moment, I’m grateful for all the wildness in my life, big and small. These are very difficult days but as organizer Kelly Hayes says, there’s still so much left to fight for. Wishing everyone a day graced by the natural world. Solidarity!


Quite the outing, Tracy! Sounds like you are enjoying your new home.
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Hi Sandy! Yes, very much enjoying our new home with all the explorations and fun discoveries. My former neighbor in CO told me it’s supposed to be 100 degrees there today so I’m really embracing the cooler temps and green here!
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In the hundreds here in NE, too.
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Quite an eventful morning, Tracy! I’ve heard of crows attacking individuals they don’t like but never of gift-giving. I would take the dead rodent as a sign from the gods.
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Crows are incredibly intelligent and I’m honored to receive such a gift. 🙂
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Sounds and looks like you’re enjoying your new surroundings, Tracy:)
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I really am loving it here, Becky. Realizing how much more relaxed I am in terms of not being on wildfire alert every time the wind starts blowing. So grateful we could make this move.
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So good to hear, Tracy!
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Fellow snail-lover! And yours is such a lovely specimen – yours is from your garden? which ended up in your kitchen sink! what a journey he’s had.
It sounds like you are exploring a new neighbourhood as I am. Isn’t it wonderful where new little roads lead? A forest to explore some more, and so many critters share your space. Fabulous!
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We could form a snail-lover club! Yes, this one must’ve been on the chard leaves I brought inside and then rinsed off. When I first spotted it on the dish cloth, the snail looked like a cat in “loafing” mode, very happily sitting still. Only when I touched it did it start moving.
Yes to exploring new neighborhoods! It truly is wonderful when we take a new route and discover new joys. Wishing you a lovely day filled with wonderful discoveries, Ju-Lyn.
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Those are some nice gifts, Tracy! Is there mole pie in your future? I’m not sure what your beautiful beetle is but if you sign up with iNaturalist and upload your photo, some beetle expert will probably know. If not I hate to use the word but AI might lead you in the right direction. Keep on enjoying those gifts as you’re right, we still have many to protect, share and cherish.
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No mole pie! HAHAHA. I will try iNaturalist to see if I can get an ID…thank you! Sending wishes for a beautiful day in your natural refuge, Mara.
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Thanks, Tracy. Pretty sticky hot here but still beautiful. You could also try Bug Guide https://bugguide.net/node/view/15740
No AI there. Just bug experts. Enjoy your generous wildlife!
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Thank you for that link, Mara. I’m giving it a look…
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Lovely! That’s one lucky snail! I’m glad for both of you it didn’t end up in a running blender!
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Also, Welcome to Washington! Comments were closed on your last post, so I came back to say “Welcome!” I live two hours Northeast of the peninsula, between Seattle and Everett.
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Thank you for the welcome! We’re loving it here. I’d love to connect with you sometime and hope we can make that happen.
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Hi Melanie! I’m also grateful the snail didn’t end up in the blender and am now examine my greens more carefully before placing them in the blender.
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