Sunday, February 6, 2005

Birds Birds Birds

Wow, this morning I see hundreds of birds outside my window.  they are dashing back and forth from tree to tree busily doing their birdlike duties.  They appeared Yesterday, suddenly.

I love to watch their antics.  I wish I were enough of a "birder" to call their names.  Starlings, I am told, but have no idea. My cousin in Hesperia has finches, dozens of finches.

Regularly I go to a back road that has bridge over a canal where the swallows nest each season.  They arrive on schedule, March 23, every year, having flown from South America.  A few scouts come a day or two early and "case the joint".  Then on the appointed day they arrive enmass and set up housekeeping under the bridge. 

They build their nests of mud that they gather from selected puddles along the canal.  Only certain puddles will do and they flock there, squabbling and scrabbling for mud rights. I cannot see the nests because there is no way to get under the low bridge.

From March until September there is a great swirl of birds that dash out from under the bridge, up into the air, turning and diving, and then swooping back under the bridge.

When the fledglings have hatched and have learned to fly, the sky is just filled with clouds of swallows practicing for their migration.  Then one day in September you go to the bridge and find they have gone.  All gone, including the babies a couple of months old, on their way to Chile.

In Chile, they raise another crop of swallows.  Then Grand parents, new parents, and their two month old swallows come back to Merced. That's a hell of a trip for a two month old.

The swallows that go to Capistrano have the best press agents and get all the publicity, but I like our Merced swallows just as well.  Every Southern California community has its own swallows.  I believe that the same swallows come to the same nesting sites each year, but I cannot tell for sure because their license plates get lost on the trip.

It is hard to get pictures of them because you cant get close to them.  Maybe, this year with my  binoculars with the built in digital camera.  Stay tuned.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

hey Dad, thanks for the reminder...I have swallow battles every year over my front door...this just tells me when to be ready!
They are cute as can be, and WHAT persistence.  They put mud up, and drop it all over my stoop, I take it down and it goes on like that for WEEKS!!!  DAILY chore.  They may take "root" while I'm gone for Spring break!
Grrrr.  Kate

Anonymous said...

I just love birds!  A sign of Spring!  I have often thought of what it would be like to be a bird.  The built-in journey in these birds is amazing!!  Take care, Chuck!! xox

Anonymous said...

I share your love of birds but find it incredibly difficult to photograph them. Will be interested to see what you any photos you manage to get.
Sylvia x

Anonymous said...

Ah, takes me back to my year of intense birding in the mid-1980s, before my camera with the telephoto lens was stolen. - Karen

Anonymous said...

I am fascinated by birds. In the UK our birds are not the showiest in the world but we have some pretty ones.  I like to watch the birds when we go to Dorset for a week in September.  Hubby goes fishing on a lake there and in the late afternoon, about 4pm, the swallows start swooping for the insects on the surface of the lake.  We also see some of the more unusual finches there too.  But I never remember what they are exactly and have to look in my little bird book !   Sandra x

Anonymous said...

That is sooo cool! It's almost like having friends return from vacation <g>... I hope you are able to get pics!!
http://journals.aol.com/astaryth/AdventuresofanEclecticMind

Anonymous said...

I am watching the birds at my feeder this morning too. Mostly doves and a cardinal couple. I love them all and it will be time for the hummingbirds soon. Paula