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[TN-Bird] Rabble-rousing bird behavior
- From: Dthomp2669@xxxxxxx
- To: tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Tue, 11 Jul 2006 19:06:44 EDT
Good Afternoon,
When I got home after being away all morning, my feeders here in the
Charlotte Park area of West Nashville in Davidson County were empty, and my
birds
were HUNGRY! The bossiest mockingbird was waiting on the streetside mailbox
as
I pulled into the drive. It followed my car up the drive, and was perched
outside the French doors when I got inside and upstairs! Other mockingbirds
were stationed all around the yard. As soon as I got peanut butter onto the
grape vine perch, "Bossy" was ready to eat, but so was somebody else! I
barely got inside the door, "Bossy" was at the peanut butter, when out of the
blue, a chickadee dive-bombed the mocker and flat out pecked it on the
buttocks!
The fearless chickadee lit about a foot from the mocker and tried to edge a
little closer as the mockingbird ate its fill while eyeing the little
intruder glaringly thus forcing it to keep its distance. After the
mockingbird
finished, the chickadee hurriedly assumed a position at the glob of peanut
butter
and began to gorge, This is the same little chickadee that appeared last
year with a bloody head and beak and with all the skin and feathers torn from
the top of its head. The little fellow IS a survivor and a parent that has
been feeding babies earlier this spring. The feathers around its bare skull
bone have provided it with sort of a comb-over to the point that it isn't
readily noticeable now that it has bare bone under there where the skin and
feathers have not grown back. It is just that I know the little bird and
recognize
its slight "deformity." It was just up there dining again as I wrote the
last couple of sentences.
Just a little while ago, I put more food out as the deck floor was empty. A
few grackles have arrived, and they are "going through the grain" so to
speak. My bumper crop of mice also feed AND provide food for the neighborhood
cats who seem to prefer mice to birds. Well, one grackle decided she didn't
care to share the "Smorgabird" with mice, so she attacked one of them with a
series of pecks that sent it scurrying into the grapevines that cover the deck
rails and floor beneath them. I don't think she killed it, but I do
sometimes find a dead mouse on the deck with a "peck hole" somewhere about the
head
or neck that I have been attributing to a young hawk or owl that hit its mark
with the beak, but missed getting it in the talons and left it there. Since
I've usually found them in the early mornings, I had really been thinking
"owl." I've had great horned and screech both on the deck "mousing" some
nights
and very early mornings when I let my dogs out to "potty." Now, I guess I
might have to include grackles among the birds suspected of killing mice. I
saw a note once on another bird line about grackles actually EATING mice.
Possible? May be!
Happy birding, everyone.
Dee Thompson
Nashville, TN
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