Blackbird tactics
Posted: Sat Jan 27, 2007 11:22 am
We have a young crab apple growing near our back windows. It has been laden with fruit. As the winter has progressed, the blackbirds have been coming to it more and more often and now only a few apples remain.
Most of the blackbirds use one of two tactics. First, they sit on a twig beneath or beside and apple and peck bits off it. Secondly, they will grab an apple and pull hard then fly off with the whole apple to eat it in peace somewhere else.
However, we have one female blackbird who seems to have perfected her own method. She flies to an apple, and while still on the wing, grabs it hard. She then lets her body hang vertically, flapping madly all the while, humming bird style, until her own weight pulls the apple free.
It's hilarious to watch as she looks like one of those circus ladies in days of yore who would hang via a mouthpiece from her partner on the trapeze above.
We've also found a method of feeding blackbirds and thrushes with some of those prunes we got cheap from the salmonella shelf. I threaded them onto a kebab skewer, stuck a cork on the sharp end and then tied it onto a young tree with salvaged bootlaces. Works a treat and keeps food away from vermin.
Most of the blackbirds use one of two tactics. First, they sit on a twig beneath or beside and apple and peck bits off it. Secondly, they will grab an apple and pull hard then fly off with the whole apple to eat it in peace somewhere else.
However, we have one female blackbird who seems to have perfected her own method. She flies to an apple, and while still on the wing, grabs it hard. She then lets her body hang vertically, flapping madly all the while, humming bird style, until her own weight pulls the apple free.
It's hilarious to watch as she looks like one of those circus ladies in days of yore who would hang via a mouthpiece from her partner on the trapeze above.
We've also found a method of feeding blackbirds and thrushes with some of those prunes we got cheap from the salmonella shelf. I threaded them onto a kebab skewer, stuck a cork on the sharp end and then tied it onto a young tree with salvaged bootlaces. Works a treat and keeps food away from vermin.