Friday, August 20, 2010

4 Chicks Still in the Box


Box #6 is the only active box left in Tarrant Park.

When I opened the box today, the 4 little nestlings were taking a noon siesta.   Once they realized I didn't have food, they put their heads down and closed their eyes.  Hear the zzzz's?

Looks like their feathers are in and they should be taking the big leap any day now.

Abnormal Bluebird Eggs



I checked on the chicks in box #1 today and was surprised.  I 3 newly-hatched chicks and 2 unhatched, abnormal bluebird eggs under them in the nest.

I hadn't noticed the abnormal size and shape of these two eggs when I monitored the box earlier this month.  (A lesson learned about monitoring:  take the eggs out of the nest and put them in your hand to inspect them - even if they look normal in the nestbox).  One egg was round and significantly "dwarfed."  The other was the right shape (oval), but 3mm smaller than a "normal" bluebird egg.

normal egg and the 2 smaller, abnormal eggs

I removed the 2 eggs that hadn't hatched - and compared them with a "normal" infertile egg I'd removed from a box earlier in the summer.  I photographed and measured them.

How to determine if they were fertile?  Easy - I cracked them open.  Both had yellow yolks - no sign of a developing chick.

The three chicks looked fine.

For more information about weird bluebird eggs, check out the North American Bluebird Society website.

Monday, August 16, 2010

Hatch Day in Eau Galle


Box:#1  2 eggs, half a shell and three brand new chicks!

Box #2:  empty

Box #3:  empty.

Sunday, August 15, 2010

One Box Left


All but one of the boxes in Tarrant Park are empty

Box #1:  3 chicks fledged.

Box #6:  4 chicks growing feathers.  An attentive female sat on the power line overhead as I checked in on her nestlings.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Chicks in the Park

All but two of the boxes in Tarrant Park have been empty for the 3rd brood.



Box #1:  3 chicks should fledge soon


Box #6:  4 newly hatched chicks

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Box #1 has 5 eggs!

I repaired and cleaned all three boxes a couple of weeks ago, and the bluebirds apparently noticed.  We have a full nest in box #1.


Box #1:  5 Bluebird eggs

Box #2:  empty (I put it on a new metal pole in the field about 20 yards from the parking lot)

Box #3:  empty.















Eggs and Chicks

It was almost too steamy to go out to check the bluebird boxes today.  90+ degrees and 70% humidity. 

The insects seemed to be enjoying the heat.  I spotted several butterflies - Red Admirals, sulphurs and Commas, but they were flitting so fast, I couldn't get any photos. 


Box #1 had three chubby chicks.  The hen was sitting on them when I arrived.  She took off when I closed my car door.

Box #6 has 4 bluebird eggs

Boxes 3, 5 and 8 are empty.  I doubt if we'll see a 3rd nest in them this month, but I'll keep checking.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

4 Fledglings in Maxville

Box 1.1   The 4 nestlings have fledged.  I cleaned out the nest and found a surprise:  an unhatched egg at the bottom, buried under the nesting materials.  I cracked it open - infertile.

Box 1.2   Empty
         

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

3rd Brood in Eau Galle


Box 1:  1 bluebird egg - the start of a third brood in this box

Box 2:  empty

Box 3: empty

3rd Brood in Tarrant Park

I had all but given up on a 3rd brood in Tarrant Park, until today.


Box#1:  3 new hatchlings, female flew out of the box as I approached.

Box#3:  empty

Box:#5:  empty


Box #6:  4 new bluebird eggs, the start of a third brood in this box.

Box# 8:  empty.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

4 Chicks Ready to Fledge in Maxville


Maxville Box #1.1:  4 ready to fledge nestlings - parents clacking their bills as I opened the box.

Maxville Box #1.2:  empty

Friday, July 23, 2010

New Boxes in Tarrant Park

I replaced boxes showing woodpecker damage in Tarrant Park with new boxes I received from Kent Hall of the Bluebird Recovery Association of Wisconsin today.

All the boxes in Tarrant Park with the exception of box #1 are currently empty.

Box #1:  3 bluebird eggs

New Nest in Eau Galle

Box #1:  new bluebird nest - no eggs

Box #2:  moved away from the parking lot and closed to the tree in the front yard - to make it less attractive to the house sparrows and starlings hanging out by the factory/store.

Box #3:  moved about 6-feet to make it more convenient for the gentleman who mows the lawn.

Sunday, July 18, 2010

5 Fledglings!

Box #1:  signs of a new bluebird nest.

Box #2:  all 5 fledged - I took the box down for cleaning (lots of guano on the walls).

Box #3:  empty

Juveniles Hanging Out in the Park

It was a pleasant surprise to see juvenile bluebirds hanging out in Tarrant Park this afternoon.  I spotted this one on the "speed limit" sign across the road from the Panther Bus Company parking lot.

Box #1:  3 bluebird eggs, female sitting on them.

Box #3:  empty

Box #5:  empty

Box #6:  empty

Box #8:  all 5 chicks fledged.  I emptied the box.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Mid-Summer Update

Here's an overview of our box Maxville 3.4 so far this summer. We believe three of our white bluebird eggs hatched and survived early this summer. They have now long left the nest. We had another batch of white bluebird eggs to be laid in the nest but unfortunately something (we think another bird) seems to have killed the eggs. We found the eggs outside of the nest totally smashed and in pieces. We were so disappointed!

In our other box, we had a house wren nesting there. We believe we had two eggs hatch and survive earlier this summer. Now we have five more eggs in the nest. We will keep a watch on these. It's so much fun seeing these birds in our yard and checking on the eggs!

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Tarrant Park - new nest and soon-to-be fledglings


Box #1:  female bluebird flew out as I walked up to it.  3 new bluebird eggs!

Box #3:  empty

Box #5:  empty

Box #6:  empty

Box #8:  4 nestlings, soon-to-fledge!

Monday, July 12, 2010

4 New Hatchlings at Maxville School


Box 1.1:  After what felt like forever, 4 of the 5 bluebird eggs I've been watching hatched today. 

Box 1.2:  I cleaned out the empty nest.   5 are now fledglings.

5 More Ready to Fledge


Box #1:  Empty

Box #2:  5 ready to fledge chicks with doting parents

Box #3:  Empty (I moved the box a few feet to accommodate the gentleman who tends the lawn to make it easier for mowing).

Monday, July 5, 2010

Independence Day in Tarrant Park

Box #1:  Empty.  I think this location is a problem due to the number of House Sparrow nest boxes in neighboring yards (I counted 5 boxes within view of this one).

Box#3:  Empty - 5 chicks fledged

Box #5: Empty - 5 chicks fledged

Box #6:  empty - 5 chicks fledged

Box #8:  3 chicks (one less than last visit)

5 Bluebird Fledglings in Eau Galle

Box #1:  Empty

Box #2:  5 healthy, but cramped bluebird hatchlings

Box #3:  empty - 5 Bluebirds fledged over the weekend.

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Fledgings and Eggs

The remaining 3 tree swallow chicks have fledged.

The two bluebird boxes continue to support 5 chicks each.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Nest failure in Maxville


Box 1.1:    The June brood has failed.  The eggs and chick are gone and a new grassy nest has been built on top of it.  I removed the initial nest.   5 warm eggs sit in the cup of the new nest.


Box 1.2:  5 healthy chicks

Friday, July 2, 2010

All 5 five bluebirds fledged today!

They were in their box last evening at 7 p.m. and they were out by noon today,  July 2.

It all seems like quite a miracle.  Now I'll clean the box for another brood.

Monday, June 28, 2010

White Bluebird Eggs


Box 6 had whitish bluebird eggs

June 26 Report:

Box 1: nest
Box 2: 4 chicks, removed 1 nonviable egg (had two tiny holes poked into it from the outside)
Box 3: 4 chicks (approx. 2 days old)
Box 4: nest (no eggs or chicks - a week ago there were 5 eggs)
Box 5: nest (no eggs or chicks - a week ago there were 2 chicks)
Box 6: 5 chicks (one day old)

Friday, June 25, 2010

Watching a Chick Hatch


Box #1:  3 Tree Swallow chicks ready to fledge - one dead chick in the box.  The box was damp and full of bird droppings.



Box #2 in the Parking Lot provided a first for me - I got to see a bluebird chick hatch!  (3 eggs, 2 hatchlings)



The action in the BRAW design bluebird box (#3)  was predictable:  5 healthy bluebird chicks

Only 1 Empty Box

Box #1:  empty - no nest/no eggs
Box #3:  5 chix
Box #5:  5 chix
Box #6:  5 chix
Box #8:  4 eggs

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Tarrant Park - Eggs are hatching

Box #1 is still empty - no nest.  House Sparrows sitting on top.

Box #3:  5 bluebird chicks

Box #5:  4 bluebird chicks

Box #6:  5 bluebird chicks

Box #8:  4 bluebird eggs

I forgot

Yesterday the 6 wrens fledged but I forgot to post it at that time.  That's from box #2 which I will take down later today to minimize the risk of housing predators  We have discovered that the box is the wrong design for bluebirds.  It was too small, and too narrow at the bottom.

Box #1 has its growing brood of 5 bluebirds.  One always has its mouth open up in the air and the four others are sleeping. I can't guarantee that its always the same bird who is waiting actively for food.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Eggs @ Tatanka

Box #1:  empty

Box #2:  5 warm bluebird eggs.  Adult on the box

Box #3:  4 Bluebird eggs (starling on the roof)

Box #4:  5 bluebird Eggs

Box #5:  2 bluebird chicks (started out with 5 eggs)  remains of 2 eggs on the ground under the nest box

Box#6:  Five warm, whitish bluebird eggs

Kings Highway Peterson box - nest, no eggs
Kings Highway Peterson box by Stai Coulee - empty and wet.

The Importance of Nest Box Design


I used to think that where and how you installed a bluebird nest box - the actual box location and pole - are more important than nest box design.

When I first saw the box the Bluebird Restoration Society of Wisconsin (BRAW) recommends, I was skeptical.  It didn't look much like the boxes I'd written about (in the US-Fish and Wildlife Service pamphlet For The Birds).  I didn't think much of the design.

But Dr. Kent Hall and his colleagues at BRAW had thoroughly tested their design and their success is supported by the data they've collected over the years. 

This season, I installed one of the BRAW boxes at Eau Galle Cheese Shop and moved the 2 existing boxes (not quite up to North American Bluebird Society standards) to better locations.  (I did not have permission to replace them with BRAW boxes.)

My experience this spring with the nest boxes at Eau Galle Cheese Factory erased my doubts about the BRAW-design boxes.  The BRAW nest box and pole set-up is by far the best (most productive) for Wisconsin bluebirds.

Here's what I saw in the three nest boxes at the Eau Galle location:






This "home made" box - box #2 - is in a good location - at the edge of the customer parking lot.  It looks good to the human eye (and apparently to House Sparrows and starlings too).  When I drove up to monitor the box this week, a starling was sitting on the roof. 

Unfortunately this attractive box has been deadly for bluebirds.

During the first brood, a pair of bluebirds tried to nest in it.  They were under constant attack by House Sparrows and starlings.  Location wasn't the problem;  it's the design.

According to bluebird researchers, the hole size is too big (making it easy for starlings to get inside and kill the bluebirds), the vent at the top is too generous (making the box vulnerable to wet and cold weather) and the interior dimensions are too small (for maximum bluebird productivity).

Tree Swallows gave it a try.  They failed too.

Finally, a few weeks ago, the bluebirds had built a nest and I thought they'd won the war.


Last week, the female refused to flush when I came to monitor the box.  This week, she was so tenacious I could actually pick her up.  That made me wonder why.

I took a closer look at the nest.  That's what monitoring is all about, right?  Look what I discovered:


Bluebird feathers under the grass nest. 


Then I pulled the nest (with the 5 eggs) out of the box and discovered the dead body of a male bluebird - with the new nest built on top of him.   I suspect the starlings killed the male, and the female found another mate.  But because the entrance hole is too big, the bluebirds are still vulnerable to starling attacks.

Taking the nest out of the box, I discovered the other problems with this box:  its interior dimensions are too small, the ventilation area at the top is too big and the entrance hole is too close to the floor.  It will be interesting to see how many of the 5 eggs will fledge.


I put the other "home made" box - Box #1 -  on a pole out by the highway, near a small tree.   This box was empty for this season' first brood.

I suspect design is to blame.  A drafty box is a deadly box in a chilly and wet spring.   Right now, five Tree Swallow nestlings are crowed in the box.  It's amazing what a difference an inch makes.

The BRAW box - Box #3 - at the entrance to the parking lot has been successful.  The first brood produced 5 fledglings.  They're on their 2nd brood with 5 warm eggs.  No signs of any problems so far.

Someone I met while I was monitoring the nest boxes recently asked:   You see all those nest boxes along the road and in backyards that have perches - your boxes don't look anything like them.  What difference does it make where you put them and what design you use?   The birds don't care.  They use them no matter what they look like and where you put them - regardless of whether you monitor them.  Right?

Yes, the birds will use them, regardless.   And that's the problem.  The difference between the boxes can be measured by their "success."

A successful bluebird nest box will fledge 5 chicks per brood.  If the birds produce 2 or 3 broods, that's a potential of 10-15 fledglings per box.

So far we've had no fledglings (out of a potential 10) and one dead adult bluebird in the 2 "home made"  boxes.  That's a success rate of -1.

We're 5 for 5 (with 5 more eggs) in the BRAW bluebird box.

Thursday, June 17, 2010

All 5 Bluebird Eggs Hatched

The happy family is all snuggled together and resting this evening.  The parents did not need to be concerned about keeping them warm.  It must have reached the mid 80's today.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

2nd Broods in Tarrant Park

Box #1 is still empty - no nest.

Box #3:  5 bluebird eggs

Box #5:  4 bluebird chicks

Box #6:  5 recently hatch bluebird chicks

Box #8:  2 bluebird eggs

Missing Eggs in Maxville


Maxville Box 1.1:  Last time I looked in this box there were 4 bluebird eggs.  Now we're down to 1 egg and one recently hatched chick


Maxville Box 1.2:   5 whitish blue bluebird eggs - warm.

Predation

The new pine boxes appear to be attractive to some kind of predator.  I found bluebird feathers and no chicks in one and a missing egg in the other.  Here's what's happening @ Tatanka Bluffs:

  Box #1:  feathers in the inside at the entrance of the box, 3 chicks gone.  (cat, raccoon?)

  Box #2:  5 warm bluebird eggs

  Box #3:  4 warm bluebird eggs

  Box #4:  5 warm bluebird eggs

  Box #5:  3 warm bluebird eggs (there were 4 the last time)

  Box #6:  5 white warm bluebird eggs

Down the road on Kings Highway in the Peterson style boxes:



Box #1 by the equipment barn:  4 bluebird chicks and 1 unhatched egg

Box #2 by Stai Coulee Rd:  empty

4 hatchlings and l egg

Two more bluebirds hatched during the night and were there with their 2 other siblings this morning at 6 a.m.  Their mother hovered nearby in a very old cottonwood tree.  I am hoping that no predators get to them as they did the last nest.  It makes me want to post a sentry by the box.  This is box #1.

Box #2 still houses the 6 baby wrens and their fierce mother.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

At last, 2 hatchlings


At  10 a.m. today my friend discovered 2 hatchlings from the 5 bluebird eggs in box #1.   It has been cool and rainy and I think the parents did a great job of incubating the eggs.


Meanwhile, the six baby wrens are doing quite well.  They have a very protective mother who dive-bombed me yesterday as I attempted to photograph the babies.  They are in box #2.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Eggs in the Park - Wrens @ Panther Bus

Fun Fest weekend in Durand.   Downtown and Tarrant Park were busy with people - cars and noise everywhere.  I braved the crowd and took a look at the boxes in the Park and Panther Bus parking area.

Tarrant Park

Box #1:  3  bluebirds fledged.  I cleaned out the box and found one old, cold unhatched bluebird egg


Box #3:  5  bluebird eggs


Box #5:  4 bluebird eggs


Box #6:  5 bluebird eggs

Box #8:  bluebird nest, no eggs -  the 5 eggs from 6/7 are gone


Panther Bus Parking Lot

Box #1:  grass nest

Box #2:  empty


Box #3:  4 House Wren eggs; 2 hatched chicks

Box #4:  6 House Wren chicks ready to fledge

Boxes Full!


Box #1:  Female sitting on 6 day-old Tree Swallow hatchlings


Box #2:  Female sitting on 5 bluebird egg.  She refused to flush, so I had to pick her up to count her eggs.  She is tenacious.  This was the box the House Sparrows fought over.


Box #3:  Female sitting on 5 bluebird eggs

Trees Swallows and Bluebirds

Box #1:  empty

Box #2:  (by the dirt road at Pepin Co Fairgrounds) 6 Tree Swallow chicks

Box #3:  empty, bluebird nest on the ground below the box, baffle immobile


Box #4:  4 Tree Swallow eggs


Box #5:  3 bluebird eggs

Box #6:  empty


Box #10:  5 bluebird chicks