2B | WEDNESDAY, APRIL 299, 2020 | SIUSLAW NEWS Siuslaw logic formation to the many different people who have stewarded and shaped its ecology. In “Restoring the Siu- slaw” (http://bit.ly/re- storingthesiuslaw), look through the layers of the local ecosystem, learn more about how critical habitats support coho in their various stages and the economic benefits of restoration for local communities in return. To navigate the story map, use your mouse to scroll downward on the page for new content to appear. To jump to a dif- ferent section of the sto- ry map, see the section titles in the black menu bar at the top of the page. For more information about the Siuslaw Water- shed Council, visit Siu- slaw.org and follow the group on social media. safe location (like a water body with other duck- lings) near where they were found. • Bring your pets in- doors. Cats are a major cause of injury and death for all birds, killing mil- lions of birds in the U.S. annually. Keep your pets away from wildlife. • Be careful when prun- ing trees. There may be a bird nest in the branches of trees being pruned. Wait until the birds nest- ing attempt is completed (no viable eggs or young). Native birds and their ac- tive nests are protected by state and federal wildlife laws. • Be aware of cavity nesters. Barn owls, wood- peckers and other birds could be nesting in hol- lowed-out trees or logs, in haystacks and even hu- man-made cavities like open fence posts, chim- neys, and other spaces around homes. Be proactive and ex- clude wildlife from these attractive nesting sites by using chicken wire or hardware cloth outside of the nesting season. • What if a bird flies into a window and ap- pears hurt? Birds can be confused by reflective surfaces and mistakenly fly into windows. If you find a bird that has been stunned as a result of a window strike, put the bird in an uncovered box with a towel on the bot- tom. Keep it in a quiet and cool place, outside and away from pets. Check on the bird in a couple of hours. If the bird has recovered, it will have flown off. If not, contact your local ODFW office or your local ODFW-li- censed wildlife rehabil- itation facility. Keep in mind that many of the state’s wildlife rehabili- tators are experiencing limitations on animal in-take capacity from operational changes due to COVID-19. If a bird can survive in the wild it needs to be left alone now more than ever. But I miss sports. I miss Damian Lillard becoming a one-man wrecking ball in an inju- ry-marred season for Port- land. I miss the pomp and grandeur of a live NFL draft. I miss that laziest of Sundays in April, languidly watching the final day of the Masters Tournament while lulled to sleep by the dulcet tones of announcer Jim Nance. I miss walking into the high school gyms and onto the fields I find myself at while covering sports. But, that’s just not quite it. I guess I could classify myself as an introvert. To clear up a common mis- conception, I’m not anti-social. As I mentioned earlier, keeping myself busy and entertained is quite simple, quite enjoy- able and often preferable. Yet, I crave social interac- tion like any member of a social species will; maybe just slightly less often than others. Being essentially forced — albeit understandably — into introversion, how- ever, is a different wrinkle and it has led me to the conclusion that I don’t really miss sports at all. I’m not sure any of us do. I don’t miss Dame Time. I miss experiencing it with my best friends, all fellow Blazer fanatics. I don’t real- ly care that there aren’t 15 baseball games on every day; I do care that I can’t talk to my mom in person — however much a pipe dream it may be — about when the Seattle Mariners will break their 18-year playoff drought. The NFL draft can get intensely boring, but not if I can watch it over a beer or two with my dad, my friends… anyone! And although I have no relationship with the Cottage Grove High School gym, I do with many of the people who are often in it. I don’t miss sports; we don’t miss sports. Not real- ly. We miss each other, us introverts included. They may be mere entertain- ment. They may be extra- neous when all our social institutions are itemized and prioritized. But, for better or worse, they are a central conduit in American society through which we connect, share, celebrate, grieve, tri- umph and everything in between — and we rarely do it alone. The only way we get them back — the only way we get each other back — is through continued cooperation, compassion and care for each other’s health and safety. A team effort, if you will, just like the kind we so enjoy watching, from local gyms to international TV broad- casts. I hope it works. I hope we get sports back sooner rather than later. Until then, I’ll dutifully bide my time, keeping myself occu- pied, but I’ll do it looking forward not to getting back the things I miss, but get- ting back the people I miss. from 1B interactive maps that tell the tale of this landscape in flux — from its geo- Birds from 1B If the nest is out of reach, place the bird on an elevated branch or fence, or in a nest made from a small box, out of reach of children and pets. Leave the area so the parent birds can return. Similarly, if you find ducklings near a road or other hazard without an adult, they should not be taken home, but left in a Snyder from 1B They have become cor- nerstones in our day to day life. They bring untold joy and camaraderie to groups of fans, players, coaches and families all over the country. They are multi-genera- tional shared experiences passed down through the years. They are also, as we’ve found with so many other pockets of life over the past few weeks, non-es- sential. Extracurricular. Unimportant in the face of illness and deaths caused by COVID-19. Don’t get me wrong. It’s easy enough to stay busy despite spending 98 per- cent of my time in the same few hundred square feet. 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Nice lit- tle community with access to Mercer Lake. Very nice unit with a storage shed and cov- ered porch. $20,000. #3068- 20236629 1749 Highway 101 • 541-997-1200 Our Sales & Service Departments are now open by appointment. Thank you for your understanding as we slowly start to provide services. We will keep you updated as we progress through opening the rest of the departments. For the safety of our community we are following measures to prevent the spread of Covid-19. (541) 997-3475 • 2150 Hwy. 101, Florence www.johnstonmotorcompany.com Your Community Keep it local. ART ALLIANCE Get Results...List With Richard. 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