Goldy - did you get a turkey? Details?
Well, a female oriole stopped by the jam bowl yesterday afternoon, so hopefully I've snagged a couple. Plan on picking up that feeder this weekend.
Thanks Carter.
Also, do bees and wasps frequent the jelly feeders?
EDIT: Just saw her at the feeder again, so hopefully they are residents and not transient.
Well the oriole stopped showing up around the time we put up a feeder instead of the bowl (3 days ago?).
A friend told us to tie orange ribbons on the shepherds hook, so I did that last night. We'll see if it works and the one that was showing up was local.
The orioles always stop coming in the late spring, at least with any regularity. My wife and I guessed that there must be some wild foods that become available around that time which they prefer to the jelly. They still do show up, though with less frequency. Perhaps they spend more time around the nest. At any rate, it seems kinda early for them to disappear, so maybe it's just a pause.
Also saw something quite sad yesterday. A pair of robins had built their nest under our front porch, tucked away by the front joists. I was wondering how long it would take the neighbor's cat to find it. Apparently it found the nest yesterday, as I saw the nest in the driveway and two fledgelings mewling miserably nearby. My son put on some gloves (to keep the scent off) and tried putting them back in the nest and the nest back where it came from. I doubt they'll make it but there is some hope I guess that they were still alive at all....
Witnessed something a bit gruesome in the yard today.
We have (had) a nest of grackles on the backyard line in a tree. Could hear the babies making a ruckus every time mom or dad would come back with food. Parents were protective of a circle around the nest and even buzzed the wife once when she got too close.
Today, all of a sudden about 10 other grackles descended on the nest and where making all kinds of frantic/frenzied racket and after about 10 minutes of this, two of the babies were on the ground dead.
I know that grackles will raid nests to eat baby birds, but this was a pack of them killing some of their own kind and they didn't eat them.
Looked online but couldn't find any mention of this type of behavior.
The stupid ****ing mourning doves continue to make nests in our gutters and after yesterday's rains, I have two plugged gutters that are beyond the reach of my ladder.
A pair of robins had built their nest under our front porch, tucked away by the front joists. I was wondering how long it would take the neighbor's cat to find it. Apparently it found the nest yesterday, as I saw the nest in the driveway and two fledgelings mewling miserably nearby. My son put on some gloves (to keep the scent off) and tried putting them back in the nest.