A mated pair of cardinals are back for the second year, and I keep them happy with black oil seed.
The male rarely hits the feeder if there are other birds on it. And if he's on the feeder, he will allow himself (usually) to be pushed off by other birds.
I have a platform feeder, and he was just on it. His "mohawk" was straight up and broad, he was pecking and chewing away and having a grand old time. When birds flew by, the mohawk laid flat. When the coast was clear, the mohawk came back up.
I remember when I rode horses for work, anytime they pinned their ears back, it meant they were frustrated or irritated.
Well, lo-and-behold, a large dove came and landed right on the tray of seed, and the cardinal took a few steps back and stared at the dove, mohawk straight back. Is that group of feathers on his head a mood indicator? I notice it in the female too.
A secondary question.
I know mother birds bring food back to nesting babies who are incapable of flight, and feed them mouth-to-mouth.
I have witnessed this on larger birds -- maybe a juvenile, but both capable of flight, and one feeding the other directly. Both were on the same feeder, side by side, literally seed at their feet. But one mouth-fed the other. Why?
The male rarely hits the feeder if there are other birds on it. And if he's on the feeder, he will allow himself (usually) to be pushed off by other birds.
I have a platform feeder, and he was just on it. His "mohawk" was straight up and broad, he was pecking and chewing away and having a grand old time. When birds flew by, the mohawk laid flat. When the coast was clear, the mohawk came back up.
I remember when I rode horses for work, anytime they pinned their ears back, it meant they were frustrated or irritated.
Well, lo-and-behold, a large dove came and landed right on the tray of seed, and the cardinal took a few steps back and stared at the dove, mohawk straight back. Is that group of feathers on his head a mood indicator? I notice it in the female too.
A secondary question.
I know mother birds bring food back to nesting babies who are incapable of flight, and feed them mouth-to-mouth.
I have witnessed this on larger birds -- maybe a juvenile, but both capable of flight, and one feeding the other directly. Both were on the same feeder, side by side, literally seed at their feet. But one mouth-fed the other. Why?