A health worker has been getting moral support from a feathered friend who comes to visit him for lunch every day outside the hospital where he works. The bright-colored robin first appeared in December 2019, joining him daily on his chosen park bench ever since.
Richard Coates, 25, works for Royal Victoria Infirmary’s critical care unit in Newcastle, England. Before the robin, whom Coates dubbed “Little Dude,” started joining him, he would spend his 20-minute breaks eating alone on the bench in Leazes Park, opposite the hospital.
The little songbird, said Coates, flies over as soon as he recognizes his friend. He perches just six inches away, but reserves the right to fly away if anybody else approaches.
Coates works 12-hour shifts at the job he loves, where he has worked for three years. A third-generation healthcare worker, he hopes to qualify as a nurse in the future—Coates’s grandmother worked for the NHS in its infancy, and his mother was a nurse for 30 years.
Amidst the CCP virus pandemic, Coates has found comfort from his feathered friend over the past months.
“It’s peaceful when he pops up, also gives me a break from the hectic life on the unit at the moment,” he explained. “Just a reminder that eventually everything will be okay and back to normality, just going to take some time, that’s all.”
Coates pays forward his moments of peacefulness with Little Dude to his colleagues, who describe him as “a true joy to work with.”
Besides his own lunch, Coates sometimes brings bird food or dried fruit to work for Little Dude. On occasion, he even offers the robin a sip of his cappuccino.
“I know he has a family in a tree about 20 or 30 feet away,” Coates said, “as he sometimes picks up some food and goes away to drop it off and then comes back to eat his own!”