I remember the days before they merged George Washington and Abe Lincoln's birthdays. George was really smacked on the hindquarters for the first time on February 22, 1732, and in his honor, stores used to have huge sales on 2/22. They'd sell cherry pies (in his honor) and various glorious items for 22 cents!
AND...if you got one of those pies, or one today at a much higher price, you can thank a American kestrel.
A kestrel is not a new SUV from Hyundai, or a new mixed drink involving three types of rum and ginger ale, or a spam-blocking app for your tablet. The kestrel is the smallest falcon in North America, just about the size of a blue jay.
And the ones who live in Michigan - where we get our supply of tart pie cherries - help the farmers bring in their crop every year.
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| Kestrel on duty for America's desserts! |
Being predators, kestrels go after insects, rodents, even other birds. This makes them unpopular aboard the Ark, but the cherry farmers love how they keep those cherry-eaters away. Many cherry farmers put up kestrel nest boxes in their orchards as Holiday Inns of sorts. Robins and grackles are not welcome; they have cherry stains on their plumage. BUT someone did a study on this very thing, and found out that for every dollar a farmer spends on these little bird huts, he or she gets $357 worth of extra cherries out of his trees, cherries that would have fed those grackles and robins, who had to go to McDonald's and dine on those red-hot fried pies.
And. not to mention it, but I will: there's a whole lot less bird poop when the kestrel is on patrol.
That's why the pies taste so much better these days!




















