"I come into the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief. For a time I rest in the grace of the world, and am free." ~Wendell Berry
It is either 'feast' or 'famine' in Missouri when it comes to rain. This spring, we seem to be in a state of deluge. With the breaks in the rain, my martins were able to get out and find food. The last 2 days of rain though were just too much for them and they came knockin'. Luckily, I had a few crickets left and a few dozen eggs.
It appears my 'regulars' remember the drill. The banded female below wasted no time being the first up to the buffet.
At my house, you best not be late when the dinner bell rings though.
I haven't been able to get an accurate count with the rain keeping most inside their gourds, but I'm estimating there are approximately 50-60 pairs here right now.
In fact, yesterday evening at 7:00 P.M. when the last weather system finally broke, I stepped out to see if my colony was doing okay. I started to worry when I only counted 5 birds on the racks. Finally, at 7:50 P.M., they suddenly started dropping out of the sky and into their gourds. They had taken advantage of the brief amount of sunshine and gone to hunt and gather. It's okay, I'm not offended they prefer live, squiggly stuff over my eggs and crickets.
I awoke today to a loud, raucous noise in my south yard - the sun was out and it was already above 60 degrees! Yay! NO crickets or eggs today! For the first time in 4 days, I was able to just cook a couple of eggs for myself.
As I waited for the weather to warm further, so I could do what I dreaded most today, I noticed my red clover was blooming.
And my homemade bird baths were filled with fresh rainwater. Bob and I have finally found a use for all the landscape rocks.
After putting it off as long as I could, I started lowering my racks and checking each gourd, hoping upon hope that I wouldn't find what I feared most - dead, starved martins. I breathed a sigh of relief after lowering the first 2 racks and not finding any. Such a relief. Then I lowered the third rack and was shocked at the condition of the wire. My mind couldn't put 2 and 2 together to figure out how this happened. And wouldn't you know it - I haven't started up the game cameras yet.
The top 3 broken wires in the picture were bent out and the one on the bottom was bent down and in, with its tip behind another wire. "Ok, WHO taught my Great Horned Owl to use a set of wire cutters?", I pondered to myself and laughed uneasily. Racoon? No way - a racoon would have climbed up the pole and already been inside the cage, wreaking his havoc. Owl? Hmmm - could / would an owl hang on the cage and vigorously work over the joint where these wires were pulled apart? Why not just fly up under the cage, instead - it would take a lot less energy to do that! Would she really wear down her beak gnawing on the wire cage, when there was an easier approach?
I called Bob out to look at it and the ends of the wire where they were separated. Click on the pictures below to see better closeups. Lightning maybe? But check out the picture above....the wires are bent in different directions....
So, other than the big hole in the cage that must have been created by some super-evolved Chupacabra animal here on Gobbler's Knob, all was really otherwise very well. I found 5 eggs in a gourd on this same rack - but I doubt they're viable, since they were very cold and there were no martins around most of the day today to incubate them. I lightly marked them with a marker, so I can keep track of their progress...or lack thereof.
It's funny how certain things stick in your head, yet you can so easily forget other significant events. Is it a conscious effort on your part to store it in your brain because it was such a catchy statement, or was it significant because of the friend that shared the information with you? Many, many years ago, as I was learning to grow native plants, a friend told me, all plants go through a "crawl, walk, run" phase, meaning the first year they crawl, the second year they walk and the third year they run.
I have always remembered that and as my plantings mature, it's become more evident what she meant. The crawling and walking stages were slow. I would explore around my plantings, carefully digging around the mulch in my bed, looking for evidence of survival and spread.
I have waited and waited and now, everything is not only running, it's marathoning. I'm so excited!
I love Missouri Wildflowers in Jefferson City and they carry just about everything you can imagine under the sun in Missouri in both seeds and pots. While Hamilton Native Outpost is closer to me and they do have great native wildflower & grass seed that I have purchased, they do not carry potted plants. MO Wildflowers is almost 2 hours away, but I love to go and visit their nursery twice a year to see what treasures I can find.
In Fall 2014, I bought these New England Asters from them in small, 3" pots. Last year they grew taller than me and this year, they have spread across the whole landscape area. I originally planted 5 small plants and they have more than quadrupled.
My favorite native bush is St. John's Wort. Now in its 5th year it has exploded with growth and there are so many new seedlings sprouting up around this one this year, I'm having to pull them to keep it from taking over. Being so wild about it, I bought 2 others in Fall 2014 also, and now I'm wondering if that was such a good idea.
My native Wild Bergamot (also from MO Wildflowers), installed from 3" pots in 2013 has decided to spread and is trying to dominate also. These Bee Balm plants were given to me by a friend 4 years
ago. They are spreading like wildfire this year, blocking the view of
my yard statue. I hope it and the Wild Bergamot claim even more
territory, eliminating the need for me to weed.
The Cardinal flowers I purchased from them in Fall 2014 are getting an early start this year and have more than doubled their size. I just purchased another dozen and 8 here and 4 more in the field!
Three years ago, I purchased Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca) plugs (32 total in a flat) from Monarch Watch. You can go here and read about their program: http://monarchwatch.org/milkweed/market/ I potted them for a year, then installed them on the bank. These 4-year old plants have not only covered the banks now, they are spreading into the lawn. They are aggressively claiming more space and I'm quite okay with that - no more mowing here, and the Monarchs will have a field day when they arrive.
This year, I purchased 64 plugs and Bob disked this field where we just planted them before the rains began. Ok, I admit, it doesn't look like much right now, but you just wait.
Prairie Blue-eyed grass has popped up everywhere - which is perplexing because I never bought that seed - we've only burned the fields and voila' there it is! Hello, to my dainty, beautiful blues!
But best of all, the Indian Paintbrush has spread and it's leaping out of the field and showing off all its wondrous, red-blazing glory.
And with all the rain today, it's really popping! As with everything in my life, all I do is centered around the 3 main
loves in my life - either my husband, my dog - Nikki, or my purple
martins. The native wildflowers we planted draw in thousands, yes,
*THOUSANDS* of insects - a lot more than any non-native blooming
flower. As the weather turned a bit rainy in the last few
days, I noticed my martins flying lower in the fields with their tree
swallow brethren, catching the 'food' that is swarming over the native
plants.
To my delight, I found the Wild Bergamot in the field has started blooming!
The pond was 'full' this morning when we woke and the martins were quiet - hunkered down for the deluge we expected today. This year, I'm offering only 75 cavities (last years I offered 84) and right now, I estimate I am 75% full with around 55-60 pairs. Hard to believe it's not even the end of April yet!
During a break in the rain, I grabbed my camera and ran outside to get some pictures and videos. The martins took the opportunity to exit their cavities and forage for food. But the tree swallows decided to put on the show. I'm not sure if many more just arrived today, or a new group decided to try to oust the settled-in residents. But the 30 minute pause in the rain resulted in a Tree Swallow Battle Royale. Listen closely and you'll hear the martins circling behind me as they come out to feed also.
As I wandered the field a couple of Canadian geese landed in the pond and while I usually don't photograph them, as they flapped their large wings to take off, I thought of a purple martin friend we lost this past week. He loved to do bird photography in his retirement and as I thought of him, my heart said, "Take the shot...Tom would". I was very happy with the way they came out.
The rain started again shortly after they disappeared in the wet, warm fog south of our field, so I retreated to the porch. It only took another 45 minutes and my pond had expanded waaay beyond its boundaries. I'm hoping my fish have not decided to pack their bags and use this opportunity to relocate to the neighbor's pond just south of us.
At least for this summer, all the animals at Gobbler's Knob - and most especially my Purple martins and my tree swallows will have a bug buffet from the dragonfly populations that are sure to result from all this water and the bazillions of bugs that will visit all the flowers that now running their own marathon in our fields.
On Saturday morning, March 4th, 2017, I got a phone call around 9 AM. "Sorry if I woke you", the voice said. After a few seconds, he finally said, "It's Luther"! Oh, YAY! "Hey, I have a scout", he said. My mind zipped to the calendar and I realized that somehow, March had quietly arrived and I had somehow missed it. I was excited for Luther - "FIRST TIME EVER, you've seen your martins arrive before mine", I shouted. He was tickled. I was tickled. And then I suddenly realized, I've been far too busy with work to even notice the changes in the season. Congratulations, Luther & Fonda on the first sighting of the season! Now, I need to get busy.
Later that day, I decided to go out and enjoy the sun and make sure I had some gourds out, since I had to leave soon on yet another business trip. It was hard to get into the spirit of the season after having experienced my most difficult year. But, after raking up 5 bags of white pine needles and stuffing a few gourds, muscle-memory took over, along with the warmth of the sun and a bit of joy started to shine through.
That afternoon, as I hung the last gourd on my rack for the day, I heard that familiar chirp. I looked skyward and found her. Yes, for only the second time in the history of my colony a female showed up first! She flew circles around and around me, and as she shared her joy of being home, through tears of joy, I managed to say, "hello Gorgeous, THERE you are!" I felt so honored, after such a devastating last year, that they would actually return to my site. It didn't take long - later that evening, she had already found a male ASY to keep her warm at night. Ironically, my first dude back has a pretty yellow band on his left leg, so I'll be getting his number soon. Looks like SHE already has his number.
First arrivals - 2017 - the male in the upper left gourd is banded.
As I stood and watched them both circle my site and chirp their happy, "hello" to me, I suddenly realized that I have been way too engrossed in my job to engage in the things that bring me joy. With all the travel and work stress, I had forgotten that this is where I find my peace and center myself.
It has been almost 3 weeks since that first pair showed up and I now have 20 martins on-site.
I am a pro at not only creating bad habits, but also breaking them and I am getting myself outside every evening when they come home and watching them as they swirl round & round the site, each circle bringing them lower & lower to the gourd racks, until they finally zip right into their own gourds and get instantly quiet for the night. What a delight!
The Trendsetter has been taken down this year. Even if I installed a larger cage on it, I couldn't get past the memories of last year and it obviously had become a magnet for the GHO. Instead of digging yet another hole in the yard though, we decided to use the existing Trendsetter ground stake that is firmly ensconced in a way-over-engineered concrete hole which will definitely hold the new super system. But first, we had to adapt the 2" square ground stake to the new 3" pole.
We were finally able to find a talented fabricator and he created a new ground stake that would help us transition the 2" ground stake to the new 3" ground stake I needed for the new Super System.
The inner measurement of the square had to be 1 11/16" to fit tightly around the existing ground stake.
The length had to be 27". The fabricator was very clever in how he built this new ground stake up to exactly the right measurements. He used the welds and plates to make the second outer tube fit solidly on the inner square tube, finally creating the exact size - 2 11/16"- needed to fit inside the 3" gourd rack pole.
Bob added some grease to the existing 2" ground stake to help with water and ensure the new stake slide on more easily.
Then slid on the new ground stake and greased the outside of it also.
The new rack is in place and all the arms have been mounted. I still have some work cut out for me - this weekend, I need to install the new cage on this new system, but the worst part is now over. Each step brings me closer to letting go of the Trendsetter and its memories and looking forward to a new season.
...or maybe a better title is, "when two passions collide". I dunno. The 2016 purple martin season was my most challenging season I've ever experienced. It was a year where my old self and my 'new & evolved' self encountered each other and had many, many heated conversations. Being passionate about wildlife means you have to accept many pleasant and unpleasant things dealing with life and death.
Our 23 acres, nicknamed "Gobbler's Knob" is a true wildlife sanctuary. A sanctuary where all native wildlife, whether predator or prey, is welcome. I am blessed to have the opportunity to work from home and be able to
observe the predators that frequent my back yard and even more
fortunate when one hangs around long enough for me to get its
photograph.
We have coyotes.
We have foxes.
We have quail (as well as many other native birds) nesting here.
We have Red Shouldered hawks.
We have an extremely fast, aggressive Sharp-shinned hawk that visits my site early every spring to help herself to the tired, migrating martins and manages to bring out the very best selection of my Navy vocabulary.
We even have our beloved national symbol visit my backyard, only 50 feet from my office window - the American Bald Eagle.
But one predator in particular - my resident Great Horned Owl - has worn out her welcome and this past purple martin season she pushed....nay - she strained the limits of my love for her. The problems I had with her this past year drove me into deep introspection and forced me to explore my commitment to being a good steward to all things wild, possibly even shutting down my colony.
I totally understand that each and every animal is
subject the predator-prey relationship. That is the one law to
which all members of nature are bound, not because they signed on to
it, but just by the very virtue of their existence, they must abide by
it, including me. My reasons for not killing this owl have always extended far beyond the fact that it is illegal to do so. No, I have not killed her because of my own principles - I strongly believe we need predators to maintain the balance that Mother Nature requires.
Since 2014, this GHO has been attacking my purple martin colony. Actually, after reviewing my records and with the benefit of hindsight to see patterns, I think it has been longer than that - maybe as early as 2012, but this past year (2016), she decided that she liked this buffet setup and upped her game.
With my monitoring setup, I knew when she first arrived at the beginning of the 2016 season. But I was prepared - I had everything caged in and I was determined she would get even less meals here this year than she did in 2015.
"*PREVENTION is KEY* - install owl guards BEFORE you have a problem. Radios (and cds with recorded 'home' noises, including a shot gun),
flood lights, red lights on top of racks, scare crows, reflector tape,
even setting off firecrackers - all of those things may temporarily
work for a week, even two or three weeks, but he/she will be back."
As she escalated her attacks every week and became more aggressive, I also escalated. At every turn she made, I was there with a counter-measure.
Everything we tried only worked for one to three weeks, depending on the
counter-measure we put in place. I was often getting up at 3:00 A.M. to scare her off when she came for her early-morning raids; but still my principles held - I refused to kill her. But I also have a full-time job and couldn't be out there every night to stop her and she took full advantage of my absences.
During the first week of July, she decided it was time to increase her success rate and learn how to get past the barriers that had worked very well the least few years. After returning from a business trip in mid-July, I was stunned to watch a video of her 'walking' around the exterior of the cage attached to the Trendsetter, probing the 4"x4" openings I had made in the wire, meant to make it easier for the martins to enter and exit the wire caging.
It was then that she managed to truly bring me to the edge of a cliff that I didn't want to be on as I watched the next 2 videos. My heart broke, my chest constricted and my throat went dry. Despite everything we had in place, she was flushing them out of the housing and grabbing them as they exited their nest boxes. Those that flushed were doomed.
In one of the videos, she dragged one of the martins through the cage hole and landed near the
game camera, where I could hear his screeching until he died. Sobbing doesn't even begin to adequately describe what I was doing when the video ended.
**WARNING - both videos below are difficult to watch, much less listen to....
As I watched from the depths of my despair, my anger flashed beyond boiling. I thought, "I am done- I have failed them....I no longer know what to do." Even though it was daylight, I was ready to hunt her down and kill her. My brain was on fire, while my heart simultaneously ached. It was obvious the caging on the house was too close to the porches, but with the wind load here in Missouri and the fact it had worked for the last 2 years, I hadn't been concerned about it. I stormed through the house, swearing that was the last martin she was going to eat. She had gone too far.
I went outside to vent my sorrow to the wind and the trees. As I stood in the yard near my gourd racks, the activity in my colony that day belied the horrors of the night before, making me feel even more devastated. These resilient birds who had to have heard the dying cries of their brothers, were busily flying to and fro in the hot, bright sunshine, feeding the remaining nestlings. It was almost surreal.
My most immediate concern was for the welfare of the remaining nestlings in the house, so, hoping that she wouldn't want to get her wings tangled up with some light-weight twine, I used some mostly-empty bottles to weigh down some twine around the remaining nests. It worked to save the remaining adults and nestlings.
As the heat intensified that day, I watched the videos above again & again, torturing myself I suppose for losing this battle with the owl. I deserved the torture. It took a long time to sort my feelings out - months even, but eventually, I realized I was actually more angry at myself than at her. She was doing what any owl or other predator for that matter, would do if they found an easy meal and her mind was only focused on two things - her own survival and that of her owlets which she was likely feeding at the time.
After all the anger, sorrow, despair, crying a river of tears, I received a few emails from a few friends that made me decide I need to pick up my pieces and move forward. So how do I go forward now? I have decided that I need to remove the Trendsetter and replace it with another gourd rack, specifically, a Super System gourd rack with a 3" pole, which will allow me to mount a larger cage that will extend further from the openings of the nests and withstand the Missouri winds better. My Trendsetter has a lot of sentimental value for me, but even extending the cage on it at this point still allows her to flush the martins out at night and this house is obviously now her favorite target.
I have learned so much about owls in the last 2 years and if a new martin landlord asked me about owls today I would tell them, "*PREVENTION is KEY* - install owl guards BEFORE you have a problem." Once an owl discovers that there is 'food' in those gourds / nestboxes, there will be no stopping him/her - he/ she will be relentless. Radios (and cds with recorded 'home' noises, including a shot gun), flood lights, red lights on top of racks, scare crows, reflector tape, even setting off firecrackers - all of those things may temporarily work for a week, even two or three weeks, but he/she will be back and nothing will stop the attacks. The most absolute best guard against an owl is to setup owl guards as preventative / proactive measures, instead of having to always *react* and be on defense.
The first step to healing is to forgive yourself. As Dana Ripper from MRBO emailed me, "hopefully you still produced a gazillion babies though"! It made me smile. It was the first positive thought I'd had on this topic in a long time. My friend Greta Webb emailed me and said, "We can learn more from our mistakes than from our successes." Thank you Dana and Greta...you set me back on my path.
My New Year's resolution was to forgive myself for my mistakes. With that, I'm moving forward to the 2017 Purple Martin Season, with a look back at the 2016 - which doesn't look like it was so bleak after all.
Enjoy the video.
This has been such an unusual Fall - not at all like the typical windy, cool Falls I've been accustomed to in the past. I'm beginning to think that Fall chose "Summer" as its Halloween costume. With the highs averaging in the 80's last week, it was windy, but not at all what I would call 'cool'.
The only real weather-related evidence indicating Fall really is
coming is the ghostly fog that hovers over the ponds and in the lower
valleys.
Common Milkweed is even regrowing new shoots. This picture was taken on Wednesday, 11/2/2016. No, no, no!
Even the ever-present, persistent and invasive thistle is re-blooming. The main shoots of these were cut off earlier in the season, thinking they would die (note the cut off stems), but the extended warm weather has given them new life. Ugghhh!!
My landscape bed is a juxtaposition of both new life and death - the New England Asters and American Beauty Berry bushes going to seed, yet the lavender and clover are re-blooming. It feels so very weird and strange right now.
Lavender bed - 11/2/2016
Clover regrowing and blooming - 11/2/2016
We can all debate the *cause* of global warming, but it's hard to deny that something is definitely changing with our weather. Plants are re-growing and blooming at a time when they're supposed to be preparing for their winter nap, storing up energy for next spring. I'm hoping once Fall does decide to start dressing them down, the plants will have enough time to prepare for their winter's sleep.
Now is normally the time I gather seeds from all my native plants. I was bummed with a rather lackluster performance by my coneflowers and prairie blazing star plants this year, but I was able to gather buckets full of New England Aster branches after the flowers went to seed.
New England Aster seed heads.
New England Aster seeds after being removed from the branches.
I had never gathered cardinal flower seeds, so when I cut off the stems with the seed heads and shook them, I was shocked at all the stuff that fell out, looking more like pollen than seeds. Not quite trusting these were seeds, I looked them up and sure enough, these teeny tiny specs are cardinal flower SEEDS! I think I have about a bazillion of them now. Not really sure they will all come up next year, but I have plenty of them with which I can test various methods to get them to sprout!
Cardinal flower seeds!
I bagged all the seeds I collected in a large brown paper grocery bag that will absorb moisture while they wait for me to perform my favorite winter rituals - burning off dead stuff, raking and scattering seeds!
My backyard feels so abandoned now that my purple martins are gone and all the gourds are cleaned and put away.
If you've noticed that I haven't written much over the past few months, it was because I had a very rough, emotional summer with my purple martins. It was one that tested my principles and dedication to all the wild things I love. It was such a tough journey and I had to come to grips with many decisions and fight many battles with my own brain and heart. It forced me to grow emotionally - painfully beyond what I initially wanted.
I am only now ready to write about it - silly me, my healing comes with writing this blog. Probably should have started writing about it sooner, but it was still too fresh. I have come to the conclusion that I will be taking down my Trendsetter before next purple martin season. This is a tough decision for me because I am so attached to that house. Stay tuned, I'll be writing more about the events of this past summer, what led to this decision and some upcoming changes.
My Trendsetter - washed for the final time and wrapped up for winter.
“The earth has music for those who listen.”
― George Santayana
This past weekend as I conducted nest checks (now 79 pair), I listened to the efforts of some of the sub-adult males to alert the colony of my intrusions. It made me laugh at their silliness when they would suddenly launch themselves and try to get the others to flush with them. Surely, that would serve to frighten and send this frequent intruder running away in terror! I could tell who were my 'regulars' as they would sit on their perches, beaks stuffed full with some type of food for their broods and roll their eyes at the enthusiastic efforts of the sub-adults. Ok, maybe they didn't literally roll their eyes, but figuratively speaking anyway.
How about that Green Darner dragonfly?
As I brushed at the mites, changed out nests and counted nestlings, I heard a group of birds from my colony sound the alarm call to the west and give chase to a Cooper's hawk. I continued with my nest check after they had evicted the intruder to a safe distance. Apparently though, the Cooper's wasn't giving up that easily. Soon I heard the martins chasing her in the field just south of us, then to the west and finally the hapless predator left for good via the northern route. I knew my martins would soon return to the perches above my head and start bragging and congratulating each other over their victory - at least that's what it sounds like to this happy martin servant.
A short update on my Great Horned Owl situation- in the last 17 nights, I've only experienced 2 GHO visits. How cool is that? Bob has some recording doo-hicky machinery and we spent some time recording stuff around the house..doors slamming, Nikki barking, shell loading in a shotgun, shotgun firing, running on my wooden deck, dropping metal pipes on the deck, cough, cough, - you name it, we recorded it. I also bought a cheap CD player to do repeated, random playing of the cds too. Along with that, I bought a plethora of night lights and plugged them into a power strip that's on a timer. Now I have my scarecrow up on the porch, cd playing random "real life" sounds and the lights turning off & on at different times. Ironically, the only 2 times the owl has visited has been during the timeframes when I had neglected to turn on the cd player. We're only a little over 2 weeks into testing this, but I am very hopeful.
Anyway, back to this past weekend. As I continued my work, I thought of all the different calls the purple martins make during their 5-month stay here at Gobbler's Knob and how I can now recognize the various stages of their nesting cycle, just by listening. Their greetings are loud and raucous when they first arrive in the spring and they sound like excited schoolchildren on their first day back at school, screeching with delight at the sight of old and new friends. As the season progresses, the loud, persistent mating calls of the males dominate the airwaves. Eventually, you know when there are eggs in the nests as the colony overall becomes more subdued and they get down to the business of incubation & keeping the eggs warm, except for the evening bathing, and the quiet social gathering and preening on the perches before bedtime.
At some point, the sub-adults arrive and the routines are thrown off kilter as the mated pairs adjust to dealing with the returns of the teenagers from last year. As eggs start to hatch, I sometimes have to double check that my colony is still around as they become very quiet while fetching and delivering food to the babies. The only indication they are still here are the black streaks across the yard of approximately 150 adults on cafeteria duty.
An SY Male (left) tries to act cool as the ASY male prepares an attack on him.
When the babies are big enough, they move to the front of the housing and their constant begging for food starts to dominate my backyard. As my goal is to fledge as many babies as possible, the persistent cries for food are pleasing to my ears.
Mom bringing home the bacon. Or, in this case, a large dragonfly is what's for dinner.
As of last weekend, we reached the point at my colony where the fun has really started. As nestlings are preparing for their first flights, the colony is coming alive with the calls of both resident and non-resident
martins flying back and forth, screeching to the nestlings at the entrances, providing
enthusiastic encouragement for them to spread their wings
and take the leap of faith. As the adults are returning each evening with their newly-fledged broods (of which I have around 25-30 nests fledged to-date), the parents' calls reverberate off my home as they try to direct their reckless entourage of fledges to return to the nest for the night where they will be safe until dawn. It's a good thing they start at least 45 to 60 minutes before nightfall, as it takes that long for some of them to be successful.
A family unit of martins coming home late in the evening.
One of the youngsters - a protective Dad stands watch as the youngster gets his bearing on which gourd he needs to enter for the night.
All I have to do is listen to them to know where we're at in each phase. Check out the list below of the multiple vocalizations performed by Purple Martins (via PMCA)
https://www.purplemartin.org/purple-martins/biology/43/vocalizations/
Vocalization Name
Who Uses/Performs It
Description/Purpose of Vocalization
Juvenile Calls
Juvenile martins
• Given at fledging time
• Monosyllabic
• Used when begging for food from parents, or when other martins approach the nest
• Also used to alert parents that they are being harassed by predators
• Used on their first flight
Choo Calls
Females
• Used when escorting fledglings back to the nest
• Used when taking fledglings out to forage
• Mainly at dusk
Zwrack Calls
Males and females
• Used during alarm or highly aggressive situations
• Given singly
• Used when predator gets too close to the nest, causing the martin to dive-bomb
Hee-Hee Calls
Males
• Related to territorial defense; usually given after chasing away an intruder
• Given in a series of 4 – 10 calls
• Often given during intraspecific (same species) combat
Zweet Calls
Males and females
• One-syllable call
• Indicate alarm
• Given in flight when martins fly away from a terrestrial predator, causing others to be more vigilant
• Shows excitement
• Males use this call if they see another male attempting to copulate with his mate
Cher Calls
Males and females
• Most common vocalization
• Used in many situations including during courtship, when showing contentment, when excited, and when approaching housing
• Sometimes used in conjunction with Zweet and Zwarck calls
• Given when in flight and when at rest
• Usually accompanied by wing and body shaking
• Used mainly during the day but also during pre-dawn hours
Chortle Calls
Males and females
• Consists of many syllables
• Sometimes used in conjunction with the Cher call
• Usually when showing higher excitement levels
• Both during the day and predawn
• While sitting
Croak Songs
Males
• Main courtship song
• Directed at mate during egg laying
• Given both before and after copulation
• Also performed during extra-pair copulations
• Given in flight and while perched
• Performed after being rejoined with his mate after being separated for a length of time
Chortle Songs
Females
• Heard most often during pair formation
• Mainly during courtship
• Given towards other females when approaching their territory
Subsongs
Males
• Only heard near the end of the nesting season, after breeding
• Performed in a variety of situations
• Most common after birds began feeding their young
• Also common during roosting before migration
Dawnsong*
Males
• Loudest Purple Martin vocalization
• During early morning hours to attract other subadult males, and thus females to the colony site
• Only sung after the male has established a nest
After all we do for our purple martins; the expense, the work, the worry
and frustration, peace in nature and connection with them can be found not only in the observation of
their antics, but also in the listening. I truly hope that everyone is listening to their colonies and embracing the joy and energy they share with us with each and every year. It's not a lot of trouble - one only needs to listen.