https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/morning-mix/wp/2018/06/26/four-speckled-bird-eggs-and-a-very-protective-mother-confound-music-festival/?utm_term=.097d71ef78a6
Four speckled bird’s eggs and a very protective mother confound huge music
festival
by Allyson Chiu June 26 at 5:45 AM Email the author
(Video still from Ottawa Citizen’s YouTube channel)
Every summer, several hundred thousand music fans descend upon Canada’s capital
city of Ottawa to attend one of the country’s largest music festivals. This
year, preparations for the RBC Bluesfest seemed to be going smoothly. An
all-star lineup featuring headliners such as the Foo Fighters and Shawn Mendes
was secured, and tickets had been on sale since mid-February.
But Friday, less than two weeks before the popular festival is scheduled to
begin, organizers stumbled upon a problem that could derail all their carefully
laid plans.
Nestled in a patch of cobblestone right where a main stage is set to be built
are four small speckled bird eggs. Guarding them is one very protective mother
killdeer.
Nate Graves, head of the crew preparing to construct the stage, told Canadian
Broadcasting Corp. that he was walking on the cobblestones when he saw the bird
flapping its wings at him.
“So I backed away and then it ran off and pretended it had a broken wing,”
Graves said. “I’ve seen that before. I knew it was protecting a nest.”
On average, an adult killdeer, a nondescript brown-and-white bird with spindly
legs and a distinct high-pitched call, ranges in length from about 8 to 11
inches and weighs between 2.6 to 4.5 ounces, according to the Cornell Lab of
Ornithology. Its eggs are even tinier, measuring only 1.5 inches long.
In contrast, the Bluesfest boasts an average annual attendance of more than
300,000 people. The 10-day music festival set to begin July 5 is expected to
contribute about $31 million to the local economy.
How did a diminutive bird and its four eggs halt the progress of such a
large-scale event?
The killdeer, while considered “widespread and abundant,” is nevertheless
protected by Canada’s Migratory Birds Convention Act, which means their nests
can’t be moved without federal permission, according to Canadian Broadcasting
Corp.
As of Monday, the killdeer and its eggs were still undisturbed. Yellow caution
tape cordoned off the area, keeping intrusive humans at bay. As an added layer
of security, a 24-hour hired guard kept a watchful eye on the nest.
“This is one of the most challenging problems we’ve been presented with, but we
feel we can work through this,” the festival’s executive director, Mark
Monahan, told reporters Monday morning.
Setup for the main stage will remain at a standstill until organizers receive
word from state agencies, including Environment and Climate Change Canada and
the National Capital Commission, about what to do with the bird and its eggs,
the Ottawa Citizen reported.
If the issue isn’t resolved within the next 24 hours, Monahan said, the
festival may be faced with “some delays that could start to snowball.”
It is unclear when the killdeer laid its eggs, but they usually have an
incubation period of 24 to 28 days, according to the National Audubon Society.
“Most of the people we’re working with . . . are looking for a positive
solution,” Monahan said. “There is no one saying that the festival can’t go on.”
Monahan said possibilities include moving the nest or gathering the eggs and
having experts at a wildlife care center incubate them until they hatch.
“We’re trying to come up with a solution that’s best obviously for the eggs and
the bird and also hopefully that wouldn’t hamper our ability to set up and
eventually put on the festival,” he said.
But Carleton University naturalist Michael Runtz warned against disturbing the
nest.
“Many birds will abandon a nest that’s moved,” Runtz told Canadian Broadcasting
Corp., noting that if the eggs are relocated more than a meter away, he doubted
the parents would still accept them as their own.
“Unless the eggs hatch before Bluesfest gets set up, those eggs will be in
trouble,” he said.
Reactions to the situation, since dubbed by Canadian media as “Bluesnest,”
flooded social media over the weekend.
Here’s what some people had to say:
“Bluesfest stage construction being delayed because of a bird nesting is peak
Ottawa,” one Twitter user wrote.
Another said the hired security guard is “my favourite Most Ottawa Thing ever.”
The nesting killdeer has also sparked a debate, dividing people into two
groups: supporters eager to see the bird successfully hatch its young and those
who are less amused that a small creature is causing so much trouble.
While the pro-killdeer camp resorted to tweeting photos of hatchlings, others
declared the bird one of “the most entitled annoying birds on earth.”
Monahan continued to offer assurances Monday that the show would go on.
“We have no indication right now that this bird will disrupt the actual event
taking place,” he said.
Ceci Mitchell
The Far Side Farm
Franklin County KY
502-875-6180