I still need to do a nest check and see what happened in the housing...hoping for the best, preparing for the worst. :(
Another interesting thing that came out of this stressful event;
1) ALL birds will be stressed out and will change their normal behaviors in order to get to food and survive;
2) other birds will notice the feeding birds at your site and invite themselves to the buffet too - I don't know if it's the sounds they make when feeding or just the large gathering or what it is, but even my meadowlarks showed up. And apparently, my bluebirds prefer scrambled eggs over crickets - LOL - who knew?
And to my shock - a flock of HOSP.
I haven't seen any HOSP for over 10 days around here, but when I put out crickets for my martins, a bunch showed up to help themselves. Obviously, I couldn't shoot at my feeding tray, and with 3 bluebird pairs nesting here, it made me really nervous. Even more so, when I noticed the HOSP touring the nestboxes, even in the rain. So I setup a cheap seed feeder on the opposite side of my house, with the cheap grain / milo mix. And they found it quickly. I was able to take out 8 HOSP there (luckily my feeder survived) and there are still 2 or 3 more that are coming there, that I just haven't been able to shoot yet. I'm starting to see a huge benefit to putting up a cheap feeder with the milo that HOSP love with pellet-gun range and taking advantage of their need to feed during winter and these dire weather events.
I know this is controversial for some, but trust me - it is a lot less stressful to take care of the issue when it's convenient for you, rather than to try to handle it when you have vulnerable, nesting birds and stress from an extreme weather event such as the one I just went through.




