• Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to footer
  • HOME
  • About
  • The Rules
  • Technology
  • Terminology
  • Lessons Learned
  • About Me
  • The UGLY

Feathers and Fuzz

one woman's cure for the empty-nester blues

  • Index of Posts
  • Meet the Feathers
  • Meet the Fuzz

Carolina Wren

Fledging Frenzy: Ten Nestlings Become Fledglings

April 29, 2018 by MoJo

Two Bluebird nestlings fledged on the evening of 25 April.  The next evening it was as if a fledging-bell rang — and the Bluebird, Phoebe and Wren nestlings were off to the races.  It was a Fledging Frenzy!  Ten nestlings took wing in a 2 1/2 hour timeframe.  Bluebirds Three through Five went first.    The runt went last and surprised me with the strongest flight of the five.  Then it was back and forth between watching the Phoebe nestlings hop out of the nest and explore their platform — while the Carolina Wren nestlings were taking in the great, wide world as they lined up in the opening of their nest box.

Particularly when you watch the Phoebes and Wrens, the challenge faced by new fledglings and their parents is striking.  Fledglings are wobbly little creatures!  Unfortunately I didn’t have a camera angle to capture it, but the Wren nestlings slid and tripped their way across my second-floor terrace until the parents signaled them to leap to the branches of a near-by tree.  At one point, the Pit-bull went to the window to try to figure out what we humans were watching.  Daddy Wren was there in an instant — warning the monster to back off.  Pretty cute.

It will be a couple weeks, typically, before the fledglings start showing up at the worm feeders.  Eagerly, I will be counting heads.

Let the Frenzy Begin!

https://www.feathersandfuzz.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Apr-Fledge-Video.m4v

Filed Under: Bluebird, Carolina Wren, Eastern Phoebe, Feathers Tagged With: Carolina Wren, Eastern Bluebird, Eastern Phoebe, fledging, Fledglings, Nestlings

Birds Announce Spring in Living Color

April 15, 2018 by MoJo

Everywhere I look, the birds announce spring's arrival in such vivid colors

Summer Tanager Returns

Summer Tanager

Goldfinches turn Gold

American Goldfinch

Bluebirds Turn Bright Blue

Eastern Bluebird

The male Summer Tanager just returned for the Georgia summer.  The male American Goldfinches have morphed back into their bright yellow plumage, and the male Eastern Bluebird sports an extra-deep-blue sheen.  To me the birds are like drops of shiny paint -- flitting from place to place -- lighting up whatever landscape they choose as their backdrop.  I love spring.

And Then a Special Treat Splashed Color on the Feeder

One of my favorite Georgia visitors is the Rose-breasted Grosbeak male.  He is one stunning, handsome dude!  I remember last fall when my daughter was feeding the birds in my absence.  She called to say she had just seen the most beautiful bird she had ever seen in her life.  I knew it was the Rose-breasted.  They are only here a couple weeks in the spring and fall as they move to their summer/winter destinations -- and they just showed up this weekend.

The special treat was the appearance of an ORANGE-breasted Grosbeak.  This is an aberrant color and, I think, somewhat rare.  You likely can count yourself among the few who have ever seen this variation.

 

Male Grosbeak - Orange

Orange-breasted, Rose-breasted Grosbeak

Male Grosbeak

Rose-breasted Grosbeak

Meanwhile --

At one week of age, the Bluebird nestlings are growing like weeds.  Their wings are taking shape and their eyes are beginning to open.

The Wrens hatched on the 13th -- meaning my hatch-date predictions are 0 for 3.  It's pretty cool, nonetheless, to actually have a Wren nest in a location that has allowed me my first-ever peek at life inside.  I can't say it's a beautiful sight, but it is pretty darn amazing!

Tell Me Again Why We Wanted Five

Newly-hatched Wrens in the Box

Filed Under: All the Others, Bluebird, Carolina Wren, Feathers Tagged With: American Goldfinch, Carolina Wren, Eastern Bluebird, Nestlings, Orange-breasted Grosbeak, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, Rose-breasted Grosbeak Orange Morph, Summer Tanager

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 14
  • Go to Next Page »

Footer

Contact Us*

Get Social & Follow Us On

This is the day the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it. Psalm 118:24

See "First Blog"

Copyright © 2026 Feathers and Fuzz