House wren (Margo D. Beller) |
Some of these birds nest in the shrubs that border my yard. I don't look for nests - it is hard enough for me to find adult birds darting around in the foliage - although I've found a few by accident or later in the year when the leaves come down and I see where the nest had been hiding.
Today, from my porch, I heard the buzzy chirps of young chipping sparrows following a parent around the yard. A few days earlier, at the Great Swamp, a female redwing blackbird flew out from a bush and I heard begging calls. With my binoculars I could see the wide-open mouths of three very hungry blackbird babies. Just off the parking lot a man with a giant telephoto lens pointed out the rubythroated hummingbird female sitting on her tiny, lichen-encrusted nest, which he saw after someone else happened to see the female fly in and then showed him where to look. I expect to start seeing females at my feeder who need food energy to spend long hours on their eggs. Females do all the work; once they've mated, the male hummingbirds are no longer involved and start migrating south as early as July.
Unlike my niece, who carried her growing son for nine months and will rear him for many years, the birds have a much shorter time frame to create the next generation and teach them to survive on their own.
Take the house wrens using the box I put up in my backyard apple tree every year. According to the Audubon Field Guide, once the female wren lays her eggs it can take anywhere from 12 to 15 days for them to hatch, and then it will be another 12 to 18 days before the young are big enough to fledge, at which point they will fly around after their parents while they learn to feed themselves.
Another year's hummingbird at my feeder (Margo D. Beller) |
House wrens have two broods a year but in my yard the box is generally only used once because by the time the first brood leaves the apples are ready to be picked, either by the squirrels climbing up the tree or me using an extension pole to bring the fruit down. The skittish wrens go elsewhere. Then, as the summer ends it is time for these little birds to fly south for the winter.
When this winter comes around my newest grand-nephew may be just starting to sit up by himself but it will be a long time before he is able to move around, feed himself and leave the nest.
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