A backyard mistake, a lost quail, and why owning our failures matters more than ever.
Less than two months ago, I wrote about slowing down. About being intentional. About not rushing through life like it’s one long checklist.
And then I didn’t. And it ended in tragedy.
Texas has this cultural undercurrent I’ve come to admire and wrestle with at the same time. Rugged individualism. Texas tough. Handle your business. Don’t complain. Take care of what’s yours. There’s something admirable in that mindset: responsibility, grit, accountability.
It also happens to be the perfect place for a kid who loves critters.
Our daughter, Valentina (aka Teeny), was born the day after Valentine’s Day, and she’s always had a big heart for animals. For years she’s been in the backyard hunting lizards and snakes, attempting to trap possums and squirrels, forever in pursuit of trapping birds, and climbing trees to check on bird nests. It’s curiosity mixed with compassion. It’s relentless and joyful.
It’s also what led us into becoming quail farmers.
In the spring of 2025 and then again in the fall, we ordered eggs. We hatched chicks (yes, they are very cute). I built out a backyard hutch (more rabbit setup than traditional coop) and the “farm-garden,” and we learned as we went. The quail became part farming project, part responsibility lesson, part family story unfolding in real time.
Two weekends ago, that same passion-for-critters energy spilled into birthday mode for Teeny.
Last year, Teeny had a rat-themed birthday party. This year, we leaned into her current obsession: squirrels.
The official agenda read something like this:
Indoor games. “Squirrel Flinging” and “Pin the Squirrel on the Teeny.”
TV and popcorn while watching Mark Rober’s squirrel obstacle course. (A must watch!)
Parents hiding nuts outside.
A nut scavenger hunt (with special golden walnuts)
“Smash the Squirrel.” (aka pinata)
Finishing with the cake.
It was chaotic and loud and sweet in all the right ways.
But between work picking up, evenings consumed with trying to help save democracy through the Texas Forward Party, and preparing for this squirrel-palooza birthday weekend, I was running miles a minute. And if I’m honest, I was worn down.
A couple days after the party, I was informed that the quail hutch was… extra stinky.
Underneath the enclosure are trays, repurposed baking sheets from a local restaurant meant to collect droppings. But the automatic water feeder was leaking. Water mixing with droppings had created what I can only describe as a slow trickle of sewage cascading down the cage.
I put off checking it for a couple days. There was always something else to get to first.
Finally, after dinner one night, I went outside to deal with it. It was worse than expected. And instead of going inside to change clothes and do the job properly, I rushed it. I just wanted it handled.
It was messy. It was unpleasant. It was a hurry-up-and-get-it-done kind of job. And in that haste, I made a fatal mistake.
The one rule we constantly repeat to the kids is simple: always close and lock the hutch doors.
That night, I left the lower hutch open. The one housing four of our fall hatch quail. I didn’t double check before walking back inside.
So let me tell you about Pumpkin.
Pumpkin, a ginger coturnix quail quickly became a family favorite. One week after hatching, my son accidentally “smooshed” her. She lay motionless for a couple hours, and we were certain she was gone. But she bounced back.
A couple months later, when the male quail started getting aggressive, Pumpkin was attacked and scalped. I’ll spare the details, but it required me crafting a tiny medical-tape helmet so she could heal. For three weeks she looked like a miniature Frankenstein’s monster. She bounced back again.
Pumpkin was a fighter. (Yes, “was”... foreshadowing)
So fast forward to the day after I rushed through the cleanup job, Teeny went outside before the rest of us. She came back in quietly and said the door was open.
Pumpkin was gone.
Based on the feathers scattered around the hutch, I’m fairly certain an owl took her during the night.
I screwed up.
And I felt terrible. Not just because we lost a bird, but because it was preventable. It wasn’t bad luck. It wasn’t a broken latch. It was haste. It was distraction. It was me choosing speed over care.
I could feel the excuses lining up in my head. But as I started to talk through it with my wife and the kids, I realized something.
Owning it would go further.
If I admitted that I rushed. If I admitted I didn’t double check. If I talked about not being present and focused. If I shared what happens when you juggle too many things. If I named the mistake plainly and clearly, maybe it would stick. Maybe it would reinforce the very lesson we’re constantly trying to teach them.
So I told them. I screwed up. I didn’t slow down.
I’m sorry.
It doesn’t bring Pumpkin back. But it mattered.
Later that week, as I watched the State of the Union and scrolled through reactions online, I found myself thinking about that same concept… admitting mistakes.
Admitting that things don’t always go as planned. Admitting that new information changes your perspective. Admitting that a promise made confidently last year didn’t unfold the way you said it would.
That kind of leadership exists. I’ve worked for senior leaders who model it well. I admire it deeply. Emotional intelligence. Course correction. Humility. Authentic messaging.
But it feels increasingly rare in public life.
And this isn’t about one administration or one party. It’s been happening across the aisle for years. Promises made. Commitments hyped. Plans that quietly shift or fail. And almost never do we hear, “I was wrong.” Or “We learned.” Or “We need to adjust.”
Regardless of where you land politically, left, right, or independent like me, it’s not hard for any of us to go back a year earlier and to hear what was said during a campaign cycle and compare it to reality.
What strikes me most is that we normalize in public life the very behavior we work so hard to correct in our children.
Own your mistakes. Learn from them. Say you’re sorry. Do better next time.
It actually makes things better and stronger in the long run.
Pumpkin didn’t deserve my haste. But her loss reminded me that the world I want to help build, whether through civic engagement, community leadership, or raising thoughtful kids starts much closer to home.
It starts in the backyard. It starts with following through on commitments.
I can’t single-handedly fix national politics. I can’t force humility into public discourse. But I can model the behavior I hope to see. I can surround myself with leaders, friends, families, and community members who value integrity over ego and accountability over image.
Texas tough doesn’t have to mean pretending you never mess up.
Sometimes it means saying:
I screwed up. And I’m going to do better.
Family first. Neighbors first. Humanity first.
Rooted in Wisconsin. Growing forward in Texas.
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