Friday, July 12, 2013

How Women Work

Turning into the dollar store yesterday, I saw a car stopped with the flashers on in the exit lane. A woman stood near the driver's door, and I slowed, thinking she needed help, rolled down the window. She pointed to the cement. A big snapping turtle was parked in the drive. I said "Don't pick it up - I've got a shovel. I'll park and be right back." While I was retrieving the shovel, another woman drove in, rolled down her window and said "I'll get a box from the dollar store." The young woman and I talked to the turtle, shuffled our feet to get it moving. The turtle didn't like any of this. We found out quickly that if we walked slowly on either side of the head, the turtle would move. We were herding it to the grass. Meanwhile, the other woman, now with the box in hand, ran up, set the box down, shoved it at the turtle's face. The turtle snapped on the edge. Wow! Now I know why you're not supposed to pick up snapping turtles. She jiggled it a little, and the turtle was in the box. She said she'd take it to the pond by her house. We all thanked each other for helping save a turtle. As I walked by the car, the woman's daughter was freaked out "Mom, what if it comes out? What am I supposed to do? Doesn't this thing bite?" The mother said, "OK, you drive, I'll watch the turtle." We all waved (not the turtle, who was obviously still pissed off.) That's how women work. We rescue turtles. We work together to solve a problem. We think about each other and all of nature. You hear that, guys that just drove by, around and away? That's how women work. This picture is of a snapping turtle I rescued a couple summers ago. An SUV had sped by, flipped it on its back and the turtle was still spinning when I pulled over, picked it up and put it on the grass. That's how women work.

3 comments:

  1. My Fred and I are always rescuing turtles along our route home, little painted ones and the big snappers (they're called snapping turtles for a reason!)...so many get clobbered...one little painted turtle had a cracked shell from being hit, we took it to the vet and one of the techs took it with her to a rehab place where her friend specializes in repairing turtle shells! A happy ending!

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  2. Bless you Linda. More animals are killed on the roads in the US in one day than are killed from hunting and slaughter in an entire year. All so we can go someplace faster. MDOT put in a turtle fence over by the Muskegon River several years ago so that they would go under the road instead of over the road as there were so many getting hit by cars. The local Representative found out and raised holy hell about MDOT using taxpayers dollars on turtles. How sad for him. I saved two turtle while in Canada. The third I hestitated before going out into the traffic. The cars moved over to avoid me and hit the turtle right in front of me. A snapper. I wept.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Bless you Linda. More animals are killed on the roads in the US in one day than are killed from hunting and slaughter in an entire year. All so we can go someplace faster. MDOT put in a turtle fence over by the Muskegon River several years ago so that they would go under the road instead of over the road as there were so many getting hit by cars. The local Representative found out and raised holy hell about MDOT using taxpayers dollars on turtles. How sad for him. I saved two turtle while in Canada. The third I hestitated before going out into the traffic. The cars moved over to avoid me and hit the turtle right in front of me. A snapper. I wept.

    ReplyDelete