Single Malts - and other odd Musings

Cardinal Babies Growing Fast


24 June 2013
The only hint of a Cardinal is the beak - these guys are filling the nest now - not long after this photo (the following day) they were gone - no sign of a disturbance, just gone - hope they just flew away like young birds do



Northern cardinals breed between March and September. They usually raise two broods a year, one beginning around March and the second in late May to July. The second nest is often parasitized by brown-headed cowbirds. Nests are built by the female in dense tangles of vines or twigs in shrubs and small trees. The female lays 1 to 5 (usually 3) white to greenish eggs that average about one inch in length and one-half inch in diameter. Incubation begins when the last egg is laid, and is performed solely by the female. The male brings food to the incubating female. The eggs hatch after 11 to 13 days of incubation. The female broods the chicks for the first 2 days. Both parents feed the chicks a diet of insects. Both parents also remove fecal sacs from the nest. The chicks begin leaving the nest 7 to 13 (usually 9 to 10) days after hatching. The parents continue to feed the chicks for 25 to 56 days after they fledge from the nest. After leaving or being driven out of their parents' territory, young birds often join flocks of other juveniles. They may begin breeding the next spring.  re/ Halkin and Linville, 1999
http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Cardinalis_cardinalis.html 

2 comments:

  1. I hope they survived - I added the time periods for hatching and leaving the nest and I think they were within the range to have done so - I don't look at your postings enough - every time I do your photography just makes me envious (the good kind of envy) of you - getting closer to Grand River Falls time for the McKinneys, Himself!!

    ReplyDelete