This year I took MANY pictures of the purple martins at my new colony site in northwest Louisiana. Here are some random pictures. The first photo shows my Lone Star gourd rack with natural gourds that maximize vertical/horizontal depth and my Lone Star Goliad house. The second photo shows various gourd racks with martins in attendance. The third photo is one of a purple martin family assembly site. In this case, a pair of ASY martins fledged their six youngsters from a natural gourd and assembled them on the dead limb of a relatively short sweet gum tree several hundred feet from my colony. The picture shows Mom and her six youngsters. Dad would not let me photograph him and he was out hunting for food. The fourth photo is a kill picture showing how deadly great horned owls can be to martin fledglings that roost in the open on exposed gourd racks or house perches. The photo shows plucked fledgling feathers on the lawn under my neighbor?s housing. You will also see a larger whitish feather that the owl lost while he/she plucked the martin. Great horned owls killed MANY martin fledglings this year in both our colonies and their kills littered our closely mowed lawns. And the final picture is a re-post. It shows my martin colony exploding into action to prepare for battle with a deadly male Cooper?s hawk that killed NUMEROUS martin fledglings this year in our colonies. He was appearing high in the sky and looking for vulnerable martin fledglings. (He is not in the photo.) His mate was worse and she often killed several fledglings a day. The parent martins mobbed the hawks but their attempts to chase the hawks away were futile.
Steve





