
Before we decided to go on vacation, a beautiful robin family moved onto the rafter of our porch cover at Winterpast. They didn’t ask permission, fill out a rental agreement, or check with management before moving in. They simply chose the spot, gathered their supplies, and built a home.
For several days, we watched the two parents work. They were amazing. Back and forth they flew, carrying grass, twigs, and whatever else robins use to build the perfect nursery. Bit by bit, their nest took shape. Tucked high on the rafter, it looked safe enough. At least, it looked safe from where we stood.
Of course, Oliver and Tanner were the first to notice the new tenants.
From their point of view, the nest was the most interesting thing to happen on the porch in a long time. They watched the robins. Listening, they kept their hopeful little dog eyes aimed upward, just in case something important fell out of the sky.
Like a baby robin.
Once the eggs hatched, life around the porch became very busy. The parent robins hunted all over the yard, pulling worms from the soft garden soil and delivering them to little gaping mouths. The babies were never satisfied for long. As soon as one parent flew away, the next arrived with another meal. It was constant motion. Wings, worms, chirping, and those tiny mouths opening toward the world as if breakfast, lunch, and dinner should arrive every three minutes.
We held our breath through all of it.
Vacation was coming, and before we left, Oliver and Tanner would need to go to puppy camp. That meant danger from the dogs would be gone, but the robins had their own schedule. We counted the days, hoping the babies would grow fast enough and fly soon enough. Every time I looked at the nest, I gave the same silent instruction.
Wait for Puppy Camp. You’ll be safe then.

Then Monday morning came.
To our horror, a hawk began circling the gardens at Winterpast. It was not the peaceful kind of circling one sees in the distance, where a hawk rides the wind like poetry. This hawk was close. Too close. It knew exactly where it was and, worse yet, what it might find. Our little wildlife sanctuary.
The robin parents went wild.
They screamed, swooped, bluffed, and attacked. They did everything their tiny, brave bodies could do against a bird much larger than they were. There was squawking from the robins, circling from the hawk, and HHH outside waving his arms like a man who had suddenly been appointed security chief of the nursery.
For a little while, it looked as though we might win.
But then we had to leave. The dogs needed to be delivered to puppy camp, and life does not always stop for a crisis happening on the porch rafter. We left the robin parents fighting and the hawk circling. When we came back, it was all over.
The nest was empty.
The parents were gone.
Nothing remained. Not even a feather.
The porch was quiet in that terrible way a place becomes quiet after something has happened. No more frantic flights across the yard. No more little mouths reaching up from the nest. No more robin parents scolding us from the fence.
Just a vacancy on the rafter. My first response was not generous. I hated that hawk. For one hot minute, I hated everything about it. It had taken the babies we had been watching, worrying over, and cheering toward flight. It had turned a sweet little story into something sharp and awful.

But then I had to stop myself.
What if the hawk was not simply a horrible villain? What if she were hunting for her own family? What if, somewhere higher in the trees or farther across the desert, there were young hawks waiting for their mother to return? What if she were doing exactly what the robins had been doing all week?
Feeding babies.
Nature often gives us moments we want to organize into good and bad. Robin, good. Hawk, bad. Nest, sweet. Empty nest, tragic. But the truth is not always that tidy. The robin parents were brave and devoted. The hawk was fierce and hungry. The babies were innocent. The dogs were hopeful. The humans were horrified.
And nature went on being nature.
There is a lesson there, although I don’t especially like it.
The garden is beautiful, but it isn’t always gentle. Life grows at Winterpast, but not everything that grows survives. Some stories end before we are ready. Some nests go quiet. Some mornings remind us that the world is not as soft as our hearts want it to be.
Still, I will keep watching.
The nest remains empty for now. Maybe another robin family will try again. If they do, I hope they consider the front yard. It’s quieter there. Fewer dogs. Less traffic. Better shade. A much better neighborhood, in my humble opinion.
Of course, robins will do what robins do. Hawks will do what hawks do. Oliver and Tanner will continue believing anything that falls from the sky belongs to them.
And the gardener at Winterpast will keep learning.
Nature isn’t always kind or pretty.
Sometimes, it simply is.





































