Every once in a while, I read a beautiful story that has nothing to do with education or politics, and I want to share it. This is one of those stories. It’s about two macaws. One is caged in an aviary. The other is wild and free. They are in love.
Terrence McCoy wrote in The Washington Post:
RIO DE JANEIRO — One recent afternoon, a smitten blue-and-yellow macaw grabbed a clawful of carrots and banana and took flight. He flapped to the top of the aviary at the Rio de Janeiro zoo and latched onto the netting. Just beyond, on the other side of the enclosure, was his love — the only wild macaw in a city that hasn’t seen a free one of their kind in two centuries.
She beckoned to him. He went to her. On opposite sides of the netting, they rubbed beaks. He passed her his food. They clung together, grasping claws, and wouldn’t let go.
Every day for more than two decades, zookeepers attest, the wild macaw has flown to the Rio de Janeiro zoo where dozens of her species are kept captive — including her partner.
In the animal kingdom, blue-and-yellow macaws are among the most faithful. They can live into their fifties, but when one finds a partner, it’s for life. The pair typically spend their days and nights together. They nibble, cuddle and even kiss. Whatever food they have, they share. If one dies, the surviving partner’s anguish is profound. Few ever couple again.
But even for such an animal, zookeepers and biologists say this Rio de Janeiro romance is nothing short of extraordinary.
Because it would violate Brazilian legislation to cage her, and because it would breach zoo policy and ethical standards to free him, the couple have only ever lived and loved on separate sides of the netting, unable to consummate their relationship.
Romeo and Julieta, zookeepers call them. An impossible love.
“I worked at the zoo for 28 years, and I never saw anything like this,” said Anderson Mendes Augusto. “There’s no explanation.”
The tale has long enchanted the city, dazzling visitors, prompting a poem by one of Brazil’s most celebrated poets — and giving rise to a series of interpretations. Some have seen a commentary on fidelity and companionship. Others have discerned the contemporary themes of conservation and environmentalism. And still more have gleaned an allegory for Rio de Janeiro itself, a city carved from a lush forest now grappling with its own loss of wildness.
But at the aviary, the relationship appeared simpler: just two birds in love.
As the zoo closed, they were still up there, holding onto one another. The only person left inside was zookeeper Daniel Miranda. Soon it was time for him to go home, too. So he finished his last duties, walked through the gate and left the aviary empty of all visitors — save one.
To finish the story, open the link. I hope it’s not behind a paywall.

This reminds me of the Seinfeld episode where Costanza dates an incarcerated woman.
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Being a birder, I have witnessed many interesting behaviors in nature. One of the most poignant is the tendency of cardinals to investigate dead cardinals on the roads where they were killed. A mate, perhaps?
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The saddest to see is a swan that has lost its mate.
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alas!
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And here, on that note, a very, very short story retold from the ancient Irish.
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Yes.
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This is a fantastic story. Thanks for sharing. I’m going to work this into my next thriller (currently a work in progress) since one of the plot threads leads to South America and Rio and one of my characters is a Brazilian trans girl, who I think, just became a fan of these lovers.
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Lloyd, I loved that story too!
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Beautiful! Thank you!
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Romeu e Julieta
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