I'm here in North central Ohio waiting my turn to get a shot at martins. I'm in my 3rd (or 4th) year trying in a decent location to get something started. I see that I can use the scout study to check subbies coming to Ohio from last year, and see that they should start showing up any day, but patience is a gift I don't possess in great quantity right now. I wish you all well in my outer voice and try to keep my secret inner voice from suggesting things like "Wouldn't it be nice if a tornado knocked down every house in the area but mine?!" Anyway, thanks to all the good advice I've been given and heeded. It's now up to the wind, rain, chance, and the mood of those 2oz birds to make my year of cutting trees, placing housing, and guarding holes pay off. Win, loser, or draw, I've had a great time trying, and will report gleefully if in the next month I can get a colony going. have a great year, all!
Tim Boyd (tboydshirt in the forum)
Any time now, martins!
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tboydshirt
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Sun Feb 04, 2018 1:42 pm
- Location: sugarcreek,ohio
- Martin Colony History: new in 2017, but ready for lots of birds. 44 gourds and 40 t14 style holes
2019 more visitors than in the past and a long suffering SY male. each year enhancing the site and hoping for the future.
I definitely can relate, too! I'm hoping those who have colonies here in my community, already, are gracious and sharing enough to not continue to add more housing so that those of us who don't have any yet can maybe have a better chance at starting our own colony this year. It's wonderful reading about the high numbers people have but I admit to being envious and jealous cuz I have none. Probably also feeling sorry for myself. Good luck everyone!
Billie from southern Wisconsin
Can you post a pic of your setup? If others have them, I would think you can have them also. Did you have FY checking out your housing after they fledged last year?BillieJR wrote: ↑Wed May 01, 2019 12:02 amI definitely can relate, too! I'm hoping those who have colonies here in my community, already, are gracious and sharing enough to not continue to add more housing so that those of us who don't have any yet can maybe have a better chance at starting our own colony this year. It's wonderful reading about the high numbers people have but I admit to being envious and jealous cuz I have none. Probably also feeling sorry for myself. Good luck everyone!
2021
T14
10 Pair
49 Fledged
T14
10 Pair
49 Fledged
this is my first year to try to get some PM to nest here,had a plastic barn. had some to land on the barn even stick there head inside but no takers. that was going on over a months time . so i tried some white plastic gourds with in a week i now have 5 nest building going on.
i have some questions
1. i have seen only one mature male and what looks like 3 - 5 females whats going on here?
2 will the birds that nest here return next year along the ones that hatch here?
i live in north alabama
i have some questions
1. i have seen only one mature male and what looks like 3 - 5 females whats going on here?
2 will the birds that nest here return next year along the ones that hatch here?
i live in north alabama
Great for you. Gourds are the preferred housing at my place too. The (sy) second year males look alot like the (asy) after second year females. Could very well be sy males. If they survive the trip to South America and back the successful nesting pairs will be back. Only a small percentage of the hatchlings return to the same colony, but usually return to the vicinity.
Jeff
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cabin man
- Posts: 92
- Joined: Tue Mar 27, 2012 11:55 am
- Location: New Jersey / Tinton Falls
- Martin Colony History: Got my first SY pair in 2017. Fledged 1, but died due to wing entrapment. 2018- changed all entrances and got one ASY pair. Fledged 3. 2019- Male returned. Disappeared after 12 days. Suspect hawk. No nesting pairs. 2020- 1 pair. Fledged 3. 2021- 12 pairs fledged 43.. 2022- 22pairs. 100 eggs .fledged74 2024–. 42 pairs, fledged186– 2025- 56 pairs, fledged 233
Tim. Pretty funny ‘inner voice!’ Keep trying. It’s worth it. I tried for 34 years before I got a nesting pair. Lots of ups and downs along the way. I adopted a ‘try till I die’ attitude. After all , if we stop trying, we’ll never get them. Play the dawn song. A lot. I’m sure that helped me. If you get a nice , calm night, I would let it play all night. As long as you don’t have any nesting pairs, I don’t think it hurts too much in regards to putting owls on your radar. I just would not make a habit of it. Be ‘choosey ‘tboydshirt wrote: ↑Tue Apr 30, 2019 4:05 pmI'm here in North central Ohio waiting my turn to get a shot at martins. I'm in my 3rd (or 4th) year trying in a decent location to get something started. I see that I can use the scout study to check subbies coming to Ohio from last year, and see that they should start showing up any day, but patience is a gift I don't possess in great quantity right now. I wish you all well in my outer voice and try to keep my secret inner voice from suggesting things like "Wouldn't it be nice if a tornado knocked down every house in the area but mine?!" Anyway, thanks to all the good advice I've been given and heeded. It's now up to the wind, rain, chance, and the mood of those 2oz birds to make my year of cutting trees, placing housing, and guarding holes pay off. Win, loser, or draw, I've had a great time trying, and will report gleefully if in the next month I can get a colony going. have a great year, all!
Tim Boyd (tboydshirt in the forum)
on the nights that you play it. I’m pretty sure that it helped me. Good luck. Rob
I AM SORRY FOR MISLEADING anyone. After watching my birds for a while it occurred to me some
thing wasn't right about my birds if they where in fact purple martins.after more research and comparing pictures i have enough data
to support my conclusion that what i have nest building are tree swallows.what i saw was a bird dark on top almost completely
white underneath breeding another bird of the same color markings.
i guess i will not have any PM's this year.now i have seen a dark bird underneath and on top assuming that was in fact a PM
about 3 weeks ago but it didn't stay
what can i do next year to keep them out and will PM;s nest in the same rack?
thing wasn't right about my birds if they where in fact purple martins.after more research and comparing pictures i have enough data
to support my conclusion that what i have nest building are tree swallows.what i saw was a bird dark on top almost completely
white underneath breeding another bird of the same color markings.
i guess i will not have any PM's this year.now i have seen a dark bird underneath and on top assuming that was in fact a PM
about 3 weeks ago but it didn't stay
what can i do next year to keep them out and will PM;s nest in the same rack?
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tboydshirt
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Sun Feb 04, 2018 1:42 pm
- Location: sugarcreek,ohio
- Martin Colony History: new in 2017, but ready for lots of birds. 44 gourds and 40 t14 style holes
2019 more visitors than in the past and a long suffering SY male. each year enhancing the site and hoping for the future.
Thanks for the replies and I since could wait no longer so I put up the rest of the houses this morning. as for Billie JR's request here is a snapshot attached reduced to 420kb so it should hopefully appear. Zoom in to see a few swallow houses around the pond. still no subbies reported in my area or even in Ohio except one in Toledo.
- Attachments
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- houses up2.jpg
- (420.88 KiB) Not downloaded yet
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- houses up2.jpg
- (420.88 KiB) Not downloaded yet
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Birds
- Posts: 71
- Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2019 11:35 am
- Location: Northeast OH
- Martin Colony History: 2017: nothing, 2018: discovered the PMCA, new house modifications 2019:Still no Martins. House sparrow and starling hate forever.
If you get martins this year they will probably love that lake. Wish you the best of luck this year they.
2017 :installed a Martin house hoping for Martins.
2018 :discovered the PMCA made modifications to a heath house .
2019 : Still no martins yet. House sparrow and starlings hate forever.
Tip :never give up
2018 :discovered the PMCA made modifications to a heath house .
2019 : Still no martins yet. House sparrow and starlings hate forever.
Tip :never give up
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Dave Duit
- Posts: 2145
- Joined: Tue Nov 25, 2003 2:02 pm
- Location: Iowa / Nevada
- Martin Colony History: In 2024, 82 pair with 350 fledged youngsters. 110 total cavities available, 82 Troyer Horizontal gourds and a homemade PVC / metal 28 compartment unit, 1 fallout shelter. Hawk and owl guards included. Martin educator and speaker. President and founder of the Iowa Purple Martin Organization. Please visit Iowa Purple Martin Organization on Facebook link: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1627283871068161 Emails send to daveduit@yahoo.com. Subject line include Iowa Purple Martin.
tboydshirt,
I wish you the best my friend. It took me 6-7 years for my first pair and I had everything going for location and all the bells and whistles. My public satellite location took 4 years and that was even better than my home location and set up. I hear ya, it takes a lot to just wait and see.
I wish you the best my friend. It took me 6-7 years for my first pair and I had everything going for location and all the bells and whistles. My public satellite location took 4 years and that was even better than my home location and set up. I hear ya, it takes a lot to just wait and see.
