While the garden hasn’t seen any frost or snow, the general temperature
has been noticeably dropping in the last couple of days and it won’t be long
before a carpet of whiteness will layer the land.
It will hopefully bring more birds, and perhaps mammals, to the food on
offer and with it potential closer encounters with the local predators –
kestrel, sparrowhawk and even the peregrine falcons that live nearby.
Due to unforeseen circumstances the new nest box was unable to be
erected, but it will be in the next couple of weeks.
And because of the increased roof space it’ll be able to better
accommodate the second camera that has been putting off nesting birds in the
triple sparrow nest box.
It is definitely putting off nesting birds because the other two boxes have
been used in the two summers it’s been erected.
I knew one was used in the summer last year, but while cleaning them in
the last couple of days I found the two without a camera had been used (see below).
The positive news was that it was the sixth brood from last summer so
between 20 and 30 new house sparrows were brought in to the local population
from that nest box.
In the eight years since it was put up there have been an estimated
150+ birds fledging from that nest box, something which is not bad for a
small(ish) rural garden.