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A peafowl connection to Iraq
SEADRIFT - A couple from Seadrift and an Army helicopter pilot in Iraq
and his wife back home in Kansas have struck up a friendship from a
cyberspace intersection of peafowl and patriotism. Bill and Bridget
McGill live in a house on the road to Port O'Connor. He designs Web
sites and sells peafowl. He runs a site, peafowlareus.com, with a forum
and where he answers questions about the iridescent birds. Chad Trenary
had some questions. |
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McGill said, "From my Web site, I got an
e-mail from a soldier, and I e-mailed him back and found he was in Iraq,
so I sent him a private message."
Trenary is a warrant officer in the Army,
a helicopter pilot. His wife, Wendy, is waiting with their children on
their farm in Kansas. They have some peafowl on the farm.
Wendy said, "My husband posted a couple of
questions on the peacock forum. We have some peacocks and this year,
they're old enough to breed, so he had some general peacock questions."
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Bill and Bridget
McGill hold the big American flag that she crocheted. They will give the
flag to Chad Trenary, an Army warrant officer stationed at Camp Korean
Village in Anbar Province, Iraq |
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Speaking from Iraq, nine hours later than
Central Time, Chad said, "I work nights so I'm up all night. I fly
Blackhawks for Army medevac missions supporting the Marines. This is my
second tour.
"It's pretty good here, real slow. I'm
over on the far west side of the country, and it's a lot slower here
than in the big cities. A slow day for me means that nobody is getting
hurt, so that's good," he said.
Visit the McGills and Bill pulls out a
boxed flag with attendant certification that the flag has waved over
Camp Korean Village and flown a mission with Chad on July 19. Bill's
enormously proud of the flag. "We'll keep it always," he said.
The flag was Chad's response to an offer
from Bill. |
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Bill said, "I said, 'Chad, I want to show
my support. I want to send you some peafowl.'
"He said no, but I said, 'I really want to
do this for you.'"
Wendy said, "He's planning to send us some
birds, but it got too hot. They can't ship them in this heat. We don't
want them to die."
Chad said, "When I was home in June on R
and R, I talked to him, and when I got back over, I thought it was
pretty nice of him, so I sent him the flag."
The McGills were so touched by the gift of
the flag that they are going to reciprocate with a flag of their own.
Bridget, 47, crocheted until recently, and her magnum opus was an
American flag, about 6-by-8 feet. |

Green Java peacocks
stroll in a pen at the McGills' house near Seadrift. Most of the peafowl
Bill McGill sells online are shipped by a partner in Angleton, but Bill
raises a few birds on his place. He has been raising poultry since he
was 16 and gives advice about birds at his Web site. |
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Bill said, "It was real special when we
got the flag from Chad. This is Bridget's best flag. She finished it on
Sept. 11. It took a while ... I'd say a year. It won grand champion in
the Calhoun County Fair.
"I wanted to send it to the president, but
she said no. But she said yes when I wanted to send it to Chad. We're
going to send Bridget's flag out in a couple of weeks," he said.
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"They live in Enterprise, Kan. They found
an old farmhouse, and last time he came home he was painting it. They
have some poultry."
Chad's homecoming is in October. Last
trip, his plane landed at Dallas-Fort Worth. "I appreciate it in Texas
when we fly into D-FW airport. They have fire trucks come out and shoot
water over the airplane, People are lined up to shake our hands. I
really appreciate the support from Texans."
Wendy says that she and Chad are both 33
years old. They have three boys - Schuyler, 11; Hunter, 9; and Tristan,
5. Chelsey is Tristan's twin sister. Chad is four years from retirement.
He will get a promotion to CW3 next month. |

Bill McGill shows the
certificate that accompanied the flag he received from a cyberfriend in
Iraq, a helicopter pilot who had flown a mission with the flag onboard
his Blackhawk. |
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