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- Newsgroups: rec.birds
- Path: sparky!uunet!enterpoop.mit.edu!bloom-picayune.mit.edu!athena.mit.edu!tchau
- From: tchau@athena.mit.edu (Terry Chau)
- Subject: Re: My feathered friend
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.205957.29830@athena.mit.edu>
- Sender: news@athena.mit.edu (News system)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: w20-575-7.mit.edu
- Organization: Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- References: <1993Jan24.165806.16214@equalizer.cray.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 20:59:57 GMT
- Lines: 55
-
- In article <1993Jan24.165806.16214@equalizer.cray.com>, jeff@cray.com (Jeffrey P. Anderson) writes:
- |> Any bird psychologists out there?
- |>
- |> There is a bird which comes to my house every morning to pick a fight
- |> with its reflection in a window. I figured it would eventually tire
- |> of beating itself up, but it has been about six months now. I am
- |> tired of waking up at dawn on weekends from the noise made by the
- |> little monster smashing against the window.
- |>
- |> I am an ecologically sensitive person, and really would like to find a
- |> solution short of destroying it. On the other hand, I'm losing
- |> patience. I have tried everything from stuffed animals to remote
- |> control vehicles, including remote-control vehicles carrying stuffed
- |> animals; if the bird sees something unusual at a window, he just
- |> progresses to a different window. I cannot hang blankets on the
- |> outside of all the windows since the homeowner's association would
- |> execute me, even if I had that many blankets.
- |>
- |> I believe it is a male and thinks it is guarding its harem; when he is
- |> doing his thing, several similar-looking birds are cruising the yard
- |> for food. The bird looks like a robin in size and shape but it is
- |> simply grey in color.
- |>
- |> Help!
- |> --
- |> Jeffrey P. Anderson KD6GMJ jeff@cray.com
- |> Cray Research Superservers, Inc San Diego, CA
-
-
- Sounds like a Northern Mockingbird. It's more or less gray. It should also have
- white wing patches, conspicuous in flight. And it also has a darkish brow
- stripe. It might have white feathers on each side of its long tail.
- I don't know if that's a correct field mark, though. If it's on the ground, it
- might do some "wing flashing" by briefly raising its wings.
-
- Then again, since you're from San Diego, I don't know if Northern Mockingbirds
- live around there. I'm not familiar with western birds.
-
- Anyway, I've read about mockingbirds attacking its own image on windows, mirrors,
- etc. Mockingbirds are vicious territory defenders, and they sometimes violently
- attack people, dogs, and other creatures just by instinct. If a mockingbird sees
- its own reflection, they think it's another mockingbird violating its space so
- it automatically attacks it by instinct. I saw a clip of a mockingbird attacking
- a side view mirror of a car on Marty Stouffer's Wild America (in slo-mo too!).
- Quite interesting. Well, that's the theory I've heard about the mockingbirds.
- I'm not aware of any other theories.
-
- What to do? I don't know. I never had the problem before. You can't dispose of
- them because they're protected. I guess the way to solve it is to get rid of the
- reflection. I was thinking about installing an industrial size anti-glare
- screen, I don't think so. You can try the stick-on hawk shadows to scare away
- the whatever bird you have. Just hope it falls for it.
-
- -- Chau
-
-