I was driving on Montana’s Highway 89 just as fall began showing up at one of my favorite spots for walking, a turn onto a two-lane country road. If you don’t know about busy Highway 89, it travels north from Yellowstone National Park to Glacier National Park, a 400-mile haul.
Making my way through a tree-heavy section on the highway known locally as “deer alley,” I saw wild turkeys in the road just ahead of me.
I immediately put on my emergency lights as I always do when I see wildlife on the road and stopped to watch two adult turkeys and about a dozen small ones running all over the place — maybe a first exploration away from their home territory.
It was a comical sight. But the car behind me, going about 60 mph, whizzed right by, pretty impatient judging by his irritated honk. Then a second car came from the front without slowing even a whit.
The result was, of course, feathers blowing up and around in the breeze like a sad celebration of lives that ended too soon.