Since today is Easter, a time of rebirth and renewal, it seems appropriate to be thinking of nesting. I like to know that the trees in our yard are homes for birds. The intricacies of their courting and nesting are fascinating to watch. Even if the actual nest is not in our yard, the birds feed and court here and bring their fledglings to feed-- so we claim them. Green Jays and Altamira Orioles may be nesting outside the yard, but they are here calling each other and eating from our shrubs and feeders all day.
Great Kiskadees continued their nest-construction today in the Ebony beside our driveway, forming the Easter-egg-shaped clump of grass and palm tree material into a larger ball and installing a side entrance. Strangely, I think there may be more than two birds working on it, though I'm not sure. Perhaps an "extra" male or female is just checking it out, or perhaps its not certain yet which two are forming the "couple." Yesterday I watched from my deck as two birds flew east from the direction of the nest, over the drive, and over the neighbor's yard. Then another bird flew from an Oak tree and engaged one of the other two, tumbling through the air while calling loudly. They spiraled about five feet together and then flew off in separate directions.
I am not going to take any more photos of the nest for a while, though I'll continue to peek at it unobtrusively. I don't want to disturb the birds by walking in the neighbor's driveway to point the camera back towards our tree. Last summer was the first time the Kiskadees nested in our yard and I wonder if they liked the location because the place next door is unoccupied. As I watch for nests, I do not want to disturb their inhabitants. The place next door is unoccupied by humans, I should have said, but not by wildlife.
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Yesterday I counted about four or five titmice in the backyard trees. The females flitter their wings and the males feed them. At first I thought some of the birds might be fledglings, but they did not look or sound like young birds, and I realized that the fluttering and feeding are part of courtship. In both photos of titmice beside possible nesting places, they have food to offer a mate.
I saw a rabbit, an Eastern Cottontail, by the road today, running through the culverts under two of the neighbor's drives. Maybe it was the Easter Bunny. If so, I'm glad it survived: Years ago, on the eve of our first Easter in this house, our two older grandsons had just come with their parents to spend Easter with us. Spencer was only a few months old, but Caleb was two years old and very excited about the Easter Bunny. When they arrived, we were all distracted, greeting the family and talking enthusiastically about the Easter bunny that would be hopping down the bunny trail by morning. Amid the noise and confused happiness we didn't notice that the stray cat who was courting us had come in the open door and dropped a screaming baby rabbit at our feet. Luckily I saw, got my husband's attention but not my grandson's, and he ushered cat and rabbit out the door. He hid the rabbit, alive but terrified, under a thorny bush where adult rabbits had been, and put the proud cat on the other side of the house. (That cat was a killer, but a sweet one. We adopted her after she had a litter of eight kittens in Brad's closet. She is now at least 15 years old and living out a long rabbitless, birdless life indoors. Our grandsons remained blissfully unaware until recently that she once tried to kill the Easter Bunny.)
No grandchildren are visiting on this Easter day (we had a great Spring Break with the whole crew two weeks ago), but we can hear at least a dozen kinds of birds outside the windows. Among those I've heard in the last hour as I've been writing this: Laughing Gull, Mockingbird, Curve-billed Thrasher, Green Jay, Red-winged Blackbird, Black-crested Titmouse, Great Kiskadee, Gray Catbird, Chachalaca, Osprey, Mourning Dove, Inca Dove, White-tipped Dove, Collared-dove, White-winged Dove, Carolina Wren, House Wren, House Sparrow, Altamira Oriole, Northern Cardinal. This is not an unusual list for here and I may have actually left some out. It doesn't even include the birds I'll see when I go back outside. We really do live in a birdwatcher's paradise!
I am so glad the wind is not quite as noisy today so that I can hear the sound of birds which is the sound of Spring on the Arroyo Colorado in South Texas.
5 comments:
Well, it goes without saying that the male should buy dinner when you go out on a date! I don't believe in going Dutch, guess that makes me old fashioned.
Even if the dinner is a little wiggly caterpillar!
Kay
Kay the Great Kiskadee nest is terrific! We have Honey Locust trees here, with long spikey thorns (that hurt like the devil if one [ahem] is stupid enough to wear soft-soled shoes around them); it's a favorite of mine, too!
Jain, I know just what you mean about the soft-soled shoes. I wear those plastic garden clogs outside. They are no match for bougainvillea thorns. But then, a bougainvellea thorn has even caused a flat tire in our car!
Kay
Those Great Kiskadees are great backyard residents to have! Wonderful photos!
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