To build or not to build

Those of you who’ve followed my blog for a while will know that I chronicle the return of house finches to my front door wreath every March. These little songbirds typically build a nest before I know it; they’re incredibly surreptitious. This has been happening for several years. A little pair actually slept in the wreath at night all winter before last, as if staking their homestead claim.

Last April, a tragedy struck and the finches have been scarce ever since. One day, five tiny, beautiful fledglings were thriving in the nest; a week later, all five died without warning. I found them with their yellow beaks opened wide to the sky, quivering; took me a minute to realize they were dead and full of maggots. This was the second seasonal brood for these parents. They’d built the nest and laid the first set of eggs before the end of February (“seems awfully early,” I wrote in my notes). Two of those fledglings died. The very day I removed the nest with the two dead fledglings in it, the parents rebuilt. They worked feverishly, laid five new blue eggs, hatched them, and lost every baby within a couple of weeks.

Seven dead babies in a season…too much for me, maybe for the parents. They vanished. There was no rescuing the wreath; it had to go, nest, dead babies, and all.

For the remainder of the summer my front porch was silent. No melodious trills of finch song. My granddaughters and I watched the bluebirds out back raise two broods (bluebirds are amazingly tenacious, territorial, and extremely loyal to their breeding grounds; they watch us as much as we watch them, almost as if to say Hello, what are you people doing in our yard?).

But the finches are shy. Nervous, even. They nest near people as a defense against predators, but they don’t want to be near people.

Ever since I took down my Christmas wreath and hung an old grapevine wreath with silk magnolias, I’ve been watching and wondering: Will the finches return this year? If they do, will the eggs hatch and will the babies be okay? If not…I don’t think I can handle the grief. I always protect the porch and door for them and yet this thing happened. As much as I love these birds, as precious as they are, I’d rather they nested elsewhere than endure it again.

I realize this is my own defense mechanism. An attempt to protect my heart.

Then, at the very end of January, I thought I heard a familiar Cheep! at my door.

Through the beveled window, I saw a shadow moving in the wreath…

Could it be?

It was.

A male house finch.

He was there and gone.

I know he was scouting the nest site.

I’ve seen him a time or two since. He comes punctually between 4:44 and 4:54 in the evening.

Three weeks later, on February 20th, he brought his mate:

The female is in silhouette; the male’s head is facing the camera—his chest is extraordinarily red (looks like there’s three of him, but that’s just the beveled glass).

I suspect they’re having ongoing discussion about nesting in this wreath:

What do you think, honey? Prime location…

Hmmm. I don’t know. I definitely don’t like this glass. Too cool to the touch with way too much movement on the other side. I must have absolute privacy for incubating my eggs.

Right, right, right. Well, you know we don’t usually build here in the curve anyway. We build on top! Lots of privacy up there!

Weellll… it just feels a little too narrow. A little more space, a little more cover, that’d be nice...

This past Tuesday, March 5th, I saw a little bird tail busily moving at the upper right side of the wreath… same spot where last year’s ill-fated nest was built.

Yet no nesting material has been laid.

And so I wonder. Will they actually build here? They clearly want to. If so…when will it start in earnest? Will they decide this wreath just won’t do, after all? Is it not quite time yet? There’s nothing random about birds, their actions, or their inner clocks; their precision is astonishing.

Dare I, dare I even hope, that they are still in the planning phase? Maybe with a week or so to go, and that there will be eggs, possibly hatching at Easter?

Time will tell. I daren’t make predictions…I’ll just keep watching and waiting…

I should just take the wreath down and let them go. It would be easier.

Oh, but love isn’t easy, is it, little finches.

*******
Composed for Day 7 of the Slice of Life Story Challenge with Two Writing Teachers


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8 thoughts on “To build or not to build

    • You have summarized my own heart, Anna Maria! Ultimately, I want them to thrive and be well. Many new finches have gone out into the world from my porch. It’s a wondrous thing to witness. Their songs are so beautiful and joyful…like a celebration.

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  1. I totally remember all your slices about the finches over the years. You truly love them! I hope that they do build a nest and that their eggs and babies survive. Thank you for writing about this again…I love to follow the saga. I like the inner finch thoughts you shared. 🙂

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  2. Oh another slice about the finches. We wait with baited breath. I guess it is amazing they have built so many nests there over the years. I do hope they return this year, but I guess it’s not a given (especially if their conversation ran along the lines you suggest!) It is such a perfect location for you, if they do.

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  3. I have my first finch nest in my door wreath… I have checked on them constantly and everything has been going well, they are about 13 days hatched. It looks as if there is a dead baby 😦 it breaks my heart. Her nest is quite small… 6 babies she’s had. Do I leave the baby there? It’s on the outskirts of the nest belly up. Im so invested and truly love having them here. Just wish I could do more or help in some way.

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    • Nicole, my finches returned this spring to lay 5 eggs the week leading up to Easter. All hatched and did well. As of a week ago, we had 5 more eggs! I say this to let you know the wondrous cycle will go on and on … I love my finches and it’s so pitifully sad to see the loss of the precious tiny things. The Cornell Lab of Ornithology says don’t remove a dead baby bird from an active nest. Once others have flown, you can. It just happens… heartbreaking as it is. I am hoping for the others in your nest to be healthy & strong. Be careful when they get past the “mohawk” stage – going to check on them can force them to fly before they’re ready and they won’t come back into the nest again. These little birds are typically survivors…don’t they have the most beautiful songs?? My very best to you & your birds!

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