By
Beth Sullivan
During
late winter, things can get pretty dull and depressing. We all look
for a spark of color in our landscape.
Lucky
for some of us that the spark we see is the most beautiful blue.
During the winter, our local Bluebirds do not migrate, at least not
far. Mostly they roam in loose flocks through woodland areas to look
for berries remaining, even dried, on shrubs and trees. I see them
in places where there are the blue fruits on the evergreen Cedar
trees in and around some of our preserves. Fennerswood, Knox
Preserve, Preston Nature Preserve, and Knox Family Farm are just a
few with the essential field habitat adjacent to cedar groves.
This male Bluebird clings as easily as a Woodpecker to the suet cage. |
This female waits patiently nearby while her mate takes his turn at the suet cage. |
During
February I think Bluebirds tend to become more desperate and begin to
seek out bird-feeding stations and will join the suet lovers. This
is my favorite time because it brings them close to my house, right
in front of my kitchen window, where I can watch them cling to the
suet as if they were woodpeckers. They can become pretty territorial
too! I have seen them flaring tempers at Downy Woodpeckers and
Nuthatches. But I have also watched some tender sharing moments as a
Bluebird couple deliberately and politely, take turns on a suet block
while the mate sits on a nearby branch or porch rail waiting.
Tempers flare when they have to share. |
Spring house hunting
By
late February or early March they have begun moving back to the
fields and start searching out nest boxes. If you are a Bluebird
landlord, you know it is time to clean the houses, remove old nests
if you left them from last year, and get rid of mouse nests and
debris that has accumulated. A clean house harbors fewer
overwintering pests and parasites.
Cleaning out old nests insures fewer parasites for the new occupants. Photograph by Ethan Frohnapfel. |
Check
to make sure your predator guards are intact and that your latches
function so you can get in during the season to check on things.
Unfortunately the “things” that need to be checked on are
invasive House Sparrows. There are very few creatures that I really
dislike, and I have tried to give credit for House Sparrow’s
adaptability. But for several years running I have witnessed their
cold blooded murders of nesting Bluebirds and Tree Swallows,
destroying eggs, killing young and adults alike. Once I found an
entire, new, Sparrow nest built on top of the bodies of the Tree
Swallows that nested there first.
A House Sparrow built its nest on top of the Tree Swallow it killed to take the nest box. |
That
meant war. They are not protected by the laws that protect our
native songbirds, and even the DEEP and USFWS encourage removal by
whatever means possible. I will remove nest material, remove or
addle eggs, and beyond that you don’t want to know.
Making Bluebird-specific nest boxes
But
there are some new and ingenious methods to be found on line, to fix
your houses to thwart Sparrows that do not deter Bluebirds or
Swallows.
Now is the time that the Bluebird pairs check out available real estate. Photograph by Rick Newton. |
One
of our volunteers has made skylights in the top of the bird houses
and created a plexiglass roof cover . Apparently the Bluebirds like
the extra light and the sparrows do not. We have one as a trial at
Knox Preserve.
A skylight is welcomed by Bluebirds but unattractive to House Sparrows. Photograph by Ethan Frohnapfel. |
Another
volunteer steward has outfitted the boxes there with a special design
using fishing line. The line really bothers the sparrows and
prevents them from perching, but the bluebirds have no problem with
it. Follow this link for more information.
For more information, here is a link to the
DEEP Bluebird Fact sheet.
The
DEEP would like all Bluebird landlords to report their successes, and
failures-those are important too. Follow this link to fill out their survey.
Together
we can find the best methods to support these most beautiful of our
birds-our spark of blue at the end of winter. Welcome to spring
nesters.
Photographs
by Beth Sullivan unless otherwise indicated.
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