I'm wondering if I'm the only bird watcher out there who didn't know how birds harvest twigs. I really hadn't given it much thought until I first saw the red-shouldered hawk female fly to a nearby pine and return to the nest with a fresh pine twig clutched in her talons. The female is the hawk in the upper right in the image below.
These hawk images were taken April 4th before the leaves came out. The female is just landing, relieving the male at the nest. Below is a closer view of her talons gripping the pine twig and the male as he lifts off the nest. When it comes to smaller birds, I assumed nesting materials were gathered loose, that birds simply found them and picked them up. I've certainly seen many birds flying with their mouths full of grass, straw, string. But I never really thought about where or how they got their twigs.
While sitting in 'Red-shouldered hawk territory' today, I watched this female cardinal moving about on a perch, fluttering her wings, swinging around, using her whole body in a manner that was puzzling at first, until I finally spotted the twig.
Above, she's pausing for a moment...maybe to rest? The light green spot on the twig above her head marks where she has been trying to gnaw it loose. Below she gives it another try.
And succeeds!
What a prize!
The more I watch birds, the more I learn and the more their ways and instinctive wisdom amazes me.
Next post: Another look at Red-shouldered Hawk Territory. The nestling is growing. Got a glimpse of him/her flapping little wings through my binoculars! (I've only seen one nestling so far.)
Friday, May 15, 2009
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For the Love of It...
...the sage sees heaven reflected in Nature as in a mirror, and he pursues this Art, not for the sake of gold or silver, but for the love of the knowledge which it reveals.
Sendivogius (1750)
Sendivogius (1750)
Love this!
ReplyDeleteBirds are so creative about how they get what they want! I loved watching goldfinches carefully folding a dandelion stem in order to perch on it while stripping its seeds!
That is amazing Vickie. Now I know also.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Vickie..I think it so great that you take the time to watch these things happening! Great shots!
ReplyDeleteNot as easy as finding bricks on a building site, is it?
ReplyDeleteOutstanding Vickie! Such a happy ending that the Cardinal got her twig!
ReplyDeleteI've always assumed that birds take sticks and twigs that were all ready broken or fallen.
ReplyDeleteThat is just incredibly cool! So glad you captured it...
ReplyDeleteWow! How cool that you were able to document part of the nest-building process. It's amazing what the birds do to build their nests. So much work...
ReplyDeleteWhat a coincidence. I just saw a bird in our back yard doing this the other day. I too had assumed they merely gathered. Seems they put more effort into it than we realized. Nature continues to amaze. Thanks for sharing the photos.
ReplyDelete