The Beginning
Recently we started small scale gardening in our
balconies. In our kitchen balcony we have a “herb pot” in which we had planted
mint, rosemary and oregano. During last few days we observed that the mint is
slowly dying. We also observed that a pigeon is frequently coming and walking
on that pot. We were annoyed and were wondering if pigeon eats mint leaves J or bites the plant for
some reason, maybe there is some worm in that soil etc. In any case, we decided
to wait and watch.
Today morning we had a surprise, and the secret was
out – there was an egg on that herb pot! Suddenly we realized why the pigeon
was visiting that place often during last few days. By this time the mint plant
had almost completely died away and had become kind of natural nest!
Egg in
the Herb Pot
Close
up view of the egg
Mother
pigeon near the egg
Let me call this pigeon Parivalakka (Parivala =
Pigeon in Kannada, Akka = elder sister) Parivalakka was in fact incubating when
I tried to take this photo from inside the house through a window. She
immediately sensed my movement from a distance, got afraid and started to flee
away from the scene. So far I have not been successful in taking a picture of her
while incubating.
Keeping
an eye from a distance
We can see that Parivalakka doesn’t stay too far
from her egg. She keeps a watch from nearby places and listens to noises around
that place.
Guarding
the nest with a bird’s view!
This is another place where Parivalakka simply
stays for a long time, probably intently watching a vast surrounding that she
can see from that place.
Need help, advices
Those who are constantly troubled by pigeons or
other birds might feel that this is just a nuisance, but we are not in a mood
to destroy or disturb Parivalakka’s plans. We are feeling amused and curious to
see nature’s work in coming days, in a non-intrusive way. But we are also
apprehensive about several things. If anyone has experience in this area and
can provide advices, we would be thankful.
-
We frequently use that balcony and currently it
is making Parivalakka afraid. Based on what I have heard so far, birds are very
sensitive and if we touch the egg or younger ones after they hatch out, parent
birds disown them. Is this true? Will this happen even if we frequently go near
the place?
-
Is relocating the pot an option, to a nearby
balcony? Will Parivalakka recognize the new place and her egg on her own? Also,
she might have chosen the current spot very carefully, and relocation might be
disastrous for her intent, notion of safety, who knows?
-
Also, we have an idea to build a small
partition-wall using cardboard or thermocol so that both of us maintain a
distance, but again no idea how Parivalakka might perceive this sudden and huge
change in the surroundings.
-
If Parivalakka now realizes that our movement is
too scary for her (and egg’s) safety, will she take the egg away using her
claws? After all, she didn’t really build a nest. The dried mint plant looks
like a natural nest, that’s all.
-
Can we water the remaining plants in that pot?
How Parivalakka might react to that? They generally look for dry place, isn’t it?
Or will she be happy to see moist soil around? Should we keep some water nearby
that pot for Parivalakka to drink or should we simply not intervene?
-
Also, once the egg hatches, we are afraid that
the bird might get too protective and might attack us whenever we go to that
balcony; we are not sure though. It is not possible to be extremely gentle with
our movements because it is kitchen balcony and also utility area - we use it
for several noisy activities that involves sudden movements.
Overall, I wish the bird had chosen a better place,
perhaps our other balconies where we could have adjusted/limited our
activities, but now we are confused and apprehensive.
More questions,
just curious
It is quite interesting to see that so many
interesting questions pop up in the head when we see this kind of natural
phenomenon so close to us.
-
Is Parivalakka stupid and inexperienced? Why
else she has laid egg without building her own nest and away from human reach?
(Many people just destroy the nest or egg to avoid inconvenience)
-
Where is her male partner? I thought they take
care of this business together.
-
Generally how many hours a day she incubates the
egg? Any idea?
4 comments:
Hello Krishna,
That was a wonderful experience of yours to read, I bet this would make you learn many things about nature and animals in general. Wish I could provide answers your queries, but I am very novice when it comes to birds. Hope you would keep us posted of the further story, Wish you the best.
Regards,
Aravind
1. It disowns its egg not becoz u touch it, but becoz of fear that you may cause harm to it (mother)
2. Relocating is not a good idea. Bird will not recognize it.
3. This is the best idea in this situation. But while building u should not disturb the bird so that it fears of coming back to that place.
4. No way it can carry its egg with its claws. It will abandon it if it can't handle the situation.
5. Just forget watering other plants, if you want to save that egg.
6. Pigeon normally can't /won't attack humans. In the worst case it will abandon its egg/baby.
I am not an expert , these answers are just by experience and knowledge. May be wrong also :)
@ವಿ.ರಾ.ಹೆ. Thanks for your tips. Without knowing things properly and scientifically, we didn't do anything drastic - because some of our actions, though carried out with good intent, can be disastrous for others.
So, we are just trying not to disturb them too much by limiting our activities and noise, that's it. Rest nature will take care, lets see.
And as you can see in further parts, this strategy seems to have worked pretty okay so far.
How long we have to wait to hear the good news (Jnr Parivalakka?)
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