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Re: Another strange birding anomaly



As compensation for the shock of finding a mouse on the couch, I'm now telling myself a very nice and well-meaning Kestrel left me a lovely gift of it's favorite food at Christmas time. The placement in the wreath was a 'special' touch, don't you think?

A bird in the wreath is worth a mouse on the couch.
John

----- Original Message ----- From: "Linda S Butler" <lindasbutler@juno.com>
To: <birdtalk@utahbirds.org>
Sent: Thursday, January 12, 2006 6:15 PM
Subject: Re: Another strange birding anomaly



I'm really enjoying this thread on bird behavior.
I suppose that Christmas wreath could be a food cache. I, too, have
watched birds cache away prize morsels. In my case, it's blue jays. They
come and take peanuts and then "hide" them in my yard. Some are "hidden"
in the lawn in plain sight. Sometimes I find them and simply recycle
them--replace them in the feeder for the jays to take away! I've seen the
jays hide food way more often than I've seen them eat it!
Linda

On Thu, 12 Jan 2006 10:25:19 -0700 "Eric Huish" <poorwill_@hotmail.com>
writes:

Last spring I had kestrels setting up house in my screech-owl box (my owls moved to a box down the street). I witnessed my kestrels caching food often. They most often cached mice in my neighbors rain gutters at the corner of the house past the down spout where there wouldn't be much water. Once I watched the female eat half a mouse then place the rest in the gutter. I often saw the male place whole mice there. The female would sit in the box and the male would bring food and call to her to come out and eat. When the male came empty handed he would fish some food out of the gutter.

The rain gutter wasn't the only spot they cached food..  I saw the
male fly
down onto the lawn, walk over to a tuft of grass and pull a mouse
out.  It
was obvious he wasn't hunting. Unless this was a stupid and very
slow mouse.
  He would also stash rodents in a small Blue Spruce in the back
yard.  The
spruce was short enough I could walk up and see the stash.  The
spruce tree
may be the most similar to the wreath.

On another note, a couple years ago a group of us birders were
birding a
city park when a Magpie took a duckling from a mother mallard with a
large
clutch.  I watched the magpie fly off with its prize and then it
cached the
duckling at the base of some brush.  After the magpie flew off the
duckling
walked out of the brush and started calling for its mom.

I think Magpies could also be candidates for the mysterious cache.


Eric Huish Pleasant Grove UT poorwill_@hotmail.com 801-360-8777




----Original Message Follows---- From: "John Morgan" <jmorgan480@comcast.net> Reply-To: "John Morgan" <jmorgan480@comcast.net> To: "birdtalk" <birdtalk@utahbirds.org> Subject: [BirdTalk] Another strange birding anomaly Date: Wed, 11 Jan 2006 22:14:37 -0700

This is weird! Someone help please!

Story:
Carma (wife) put the Christmas wreath on our front door just after
Thanksgiving. At some point in early December, she brought the
wreath in
to add something to it. She laid it on the living room couch that
evening, made the adjustments, then picked it up and put it back on
the
front door.

Next morning in the light of day, I noticed something lying on the
couch
where the wreath had been. Approaching closer, I see it's a dead
mouse
(not dried and shriveled...no rigormortis...fresh, but some mangling
of
the head). Sorry for the description, but its condition seems
important
to the crime scene investigation.

Naturally, I had to show her. "Honey, why is there a dead mouse on
our
couch?" Shrieks and screams ensue. After the melee, we wondered who
would play such a trick on us. "Could/would a bird have done this?"
I
wondered.

The wreath is still up. Carma was off work today. I got another
phone
call: "You're not going to believe this but there's another mouse in
our
wreath today!"

OK, fine. I give up. Who's the culprit? Is this bird activity? What
bird
caches it's food (mice)? 22nd W 90th S area of West Jordan. No
Jays,
other than their hawk-heckling cousins, the Magpies. No Shrikes. No
mouse eaters other than the occasional Kestrels and SS
Hawks/Coopers.

Has anyone else seen anything like this? We have no known human
pranksters in the area, but no birds have ever been witnessed
hanging
around our front door.

Confused...and interested.
John
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