The Lovely Fairy Tern

Narrator: Chris Genthree
 •  2 min. read  •  grade level: 10
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“This also cometh forth from the Lord of hosts, [who] is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in working.”
Isaiah 28:29
The bird creation has many of the Creator’s most beautiful creatures. Peacocks, cardinals, hummingbirds and many others have colorful feathers that are beautiful. But the fairy tern is not among these. It is pure white and has no color except for a dark beak and black feathers around its soft, dark eyes. It is most attractive in the air with outspread wings.
Fairy terns live in Hawaii, Midway and other Pacific islands and do not migrate like most other terns. They are great fishers, gliding smoothly just above the waves to snatch fish without stopping. They continue fishing while holding each catch crosswise in their beaks and return to land with a dozen or more at a time.
These birds attract visitors to their home areas because of a most peculiar manner of laying eggs, incubating them and raising their young. They seem entirely disinterested in making nests, but deposit single eggs on rocky bluffs or balance them on bare branches, pieces of stranded driftwood or almost any convenient, available place. Surprisingly, these eggs, which appear so carelessly placed and look as though they would fall at any moment, seldom do fall, and then only because of a strong wind or something meddling with them.
The parents themselves are quite careful about this, incubating the egg by settling very gently on it, covering it with soft underfeathers. Those who have watched this never fail to be surprised at the skill with which both parents take on this incubating responsibility, particularly since it takes a month for the egg to hatch.
Again, as the baby bird breaks out of its shell, an observer would think surely it would fall from its support and the egg and chick would be smashed below. But no, this hardly ever happens. The little newborn chick has been given a sense of balance that few creatures have so early in life and has also been provided with strong, long claws to hold securely to its shaky home right from the start.
Both parents care for the chick for about two months, feeding it mostly small fish which it swallows whole. After that time, the instincts given by the Creator and what it has learned by watching its parents enable it to live on its own.
Although it is not likely that the psalmist ever saw the pure-white fairy tern, no doubt he observed other birds caring for their young when he wrote: “He [the Lord God] shall cover thee with His feathers, and under His wings shalt thou trust” (Psalm 91:4). Have you put your trust in Him?
ML-01/28/2001