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Zanna's Nature Notes: Baby birds
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Discover the amazing natural world around you with Usborne author Zanna Davidson. This week is all about wrens (or nearly all about, as you’ll see).
I’ve always loved wrens. They’re tiny, only weighing as much as a £1 coin (or less than a half dollar).
But for all their smallness, wrens are the jauntiest of birds, hopping about with their little round bodies and sticky-uppy tails. And they can belt out a rattling song.
And then, three weeks ago, to my huge excitement, I found a wren’s nest in the garden.
Here it is, under the decking:
Male wrens make their nests out of leaves, grass and moss. You can see the moss really clearly here. Male wrens actually make quite a few nests and the female chooses the one she likes best. Then she lines the nest with feathers.
The female wren probably laid her eggs at the end of April, but we didn’t know the nest was there until we began to hear a CHEEP! CHEEP! CHEEP! By then, her babies had hatched and were calling noisily for food.
After that, we watched and waited and saw the parent wrens, tirelessly flying in and out of the nest, bringing their babies insects and spiders in their long thin bills.
Here are mummy and daddy wren, each with a nice green caterpillar in their beaks. (I can’t tell which is which, as they’re very tricky to tell apart. Males are slightly bigger, but only slightly).
For the next two weeks, I kept going into the garden, to check the babies were still cheeping, and that the parents were still visiting. And then, two days ago, it finally happened… the babies left the nest. This is known as fledging.
Out they flew, three little warm-brown fluffy balls of life… only I never saw it happen! Baby birds usually fledge in the early morning, with lots of encouragement from their parents, as they’re very reluctant to leave the safety of the nest.
Now the fledgelings are hiding in the garden hedge. The parents are still feeding them, as they learn to fly properly and fend for themselves. But they’re so small, and so deep in the hedge, I can’t photograph them.
So no baby wren pictures! But when I told my neighbour the story of my wrens, and how sad I was that we didn’t manage to photograph them, she told me that in her garden she has a family of baby blue tits, who fledged last week, and she did catch them on camera. And very kindly, she sent me her photos so we could all feast our eyes on some fluffy baby birds. Here they are, brilliantly camouflaged among the leaves:
You can see how well these fledgelings are camouflaged against the green leaves
Even better, she got them on video. Aren’t they sweet!
June is the month for seeing baby birds fledge. Can you spot one? Here are some tips: There are just a few important rules to remember:Spotting baby birds
Photos by Peter Bradley and Helen Bennett