Wednesday 18 February 2015

Location, location, location

As it's 'national nest box week' I thought I would take a moment to write a quick blog about the breeding season which is quickly creeping up on us. You might be thinking that it's a bit early to be taking about nest boxes and breeding birds, but it's not, I promise. This is a great time of year to put boxes up, birds are already setting up territories and looking for the best real estate to set up home for the spring and summer. It's all about location, location, location, birds are looking for the best places to raise their families and you have to start early to secure the best spot. This weekend we have a nest box building event from 10-2pm, and there's no need to book, just drop in. You will be able to build your own box to take home.

Here are some boxes I made with the local youth club a couple of weeks ago:

Perfect for blue tits

We all live by our watches and calendars and timetables, and often remark when seasons change, almost over night. I have found myself saying things like 'I cant believe its autumn already', sometimes it's as though you wake up one morning and the landscape has changed magically over night.

So what am I getting at?.....Well actually we can avoid this 'magic season change phenomenon' if we take the time to look and listen and even smell the world around us. You will find your senses become more sensitive to seasonal cues, and comments like 'oh wow it's spring already, how did that happen?!!!' will be a thing of the past.

If you go for a walk around Sandwell valley this weekend, you will find that spring is here already, and here are some signs:

A song thrush is singing in the first car park first thing in the morning at the moment. Singing means 'I'm setting up a territory' and 'Let's see if the ladies can resist this tune'.... It's a great time of year to listen to birds because the trees are still bare so it's easy to spot who the singers are. Birds generally don't bother singing in winter, it's a waste of valuable energy and they need to be looking for food in the colder months.

Another thing to look out for are the buds growing on the trees and shrubs, they're planning for the spring sunshine and know that the longer days are coming. A nice thing to spot in February are the catkins on the hazel tree, I just popped out of the office to get this picture to show you:

Hazel catkins

Catkins are basically the flowering part of this tree; other trees produce catkins too, like the willow.

Not convinced? Well as I sit here and write this blog, the office door propped open and I can hear an ice cream van making it's way along tanhouse avenue. Surely that's enough to convince any 'spring skeptics'?

Come down and see u if you can, or take a short walk around any green space near where you live and look for the different trees coming into bud and listen for singing birds. I guarantee it will put a smile of your face.

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