Sally and Twigs Zenaida are a pair of mourning doves that decided to rear their young just outside of and above my cat Lucy's and my bedroom. This was first mentioned in this post. If everything were to go as nature has planned they would be expecting the first of two eggs to hatch within the next couple of days. However life has a way of throwing a wrench in the works with unexpected events or situations that disrupt plans or expectations. So far, I have witnessed two such events for Sally and Twigs. Right now I'm hoping things worked out in such a way for the second event so that their second egg remains viable. I'll provide a brief explanation.
The first egg was probably laid early morning on March 31st. Both parents take turns incubating the eggs for about 14 days. The male usually incubates during the day, and the female at night. So far this has been my experience. However, as the sun moved toward the horizon on March 31, I believe I may have inadvertently disturbed Twig's shift on the nest by bringing a low profile ceramic bowl of water out nearby the nest. He joined Sally on the other side of their walled enclosure and under bushes in front of the house less than five yards away. They had seen me inside their area before and, in fact, they probably observed my behavior around the house for at least a couple of days before I realized what they were up to. They were both under a large, weeping Eremophila bignoniiflora bush that's just behind the driveway. I had even pulled my car out of the garage with them there on at least one previous occasion. Be that as it may, I went around the house from the other side after what I already thought was too long to be off nest and observed them from the other end of my driveway, just inside the pedestrian sidewalk and close to the street. I was approximately 47 feet away from them and they took off. They flew so far east of me I basically watched them disappear. That was my first heartbreak. At the time I had no idea if a first egg had been laid. I discovered there was indeed an egg when I carefully reviewed some sloppy video recorded on my phone, frame by frame, a couple of days later. They were back early the following morning but of course that egg was no longer viable.
Fast forward to two nights ago, around 3:30 AM, Friday, April 11th. There was a commotion up on the nest that was so loud it woke me up. I'd describe it as mostly wing fluttering from the nest and ultimately I heard the sound doves make when they take flight which is called a wing whistle. I panicked in my stupor, ultimately grabbing a flashlight and going out the front door to the front walkway. My first thought was Sally had been accosted by a rat. The nest was empty but it also looked undisturbed. I have a camera that covers this area out to the street. I didn't see any events recorded. It's not unusual though for stuff to record to the camera and not always get picked up on the software. Yes, it's a cheap camera, I'd like to replace it. Well, I checked the camera again last night before bed and lo and behold there were recordings of me going out twice with my flashlight (I actually went out three times, one incident didn't record) and there was also a recording of a raccoon coming down from the roof. I don't believe it's at all possible for a raccoon to reach the nest but it obviously got close enough to disturb Sally. My hope is that Sally came back in time to maintain viability of the second egg.
Time stamps are in the upper left corners but are probably hard to read. Me with the flashlight is 03:35:03, this was the first time I checked, there were additional noises that had me go out again. The raccoon was obviously still mulling around, I believe on the adjacent roof of the garage. His timestamp here is 03:08:05. Behind me and the jerk raccoon is the Eremophila bignoniiflora bush which has just begun flowering. As always, click the image for a better view.
Here are some more pleasant moments with the doves. I will state again, all photos taken of the birds on the wall were taken from inside the bedroom through a dirty window. I will also mention again that mourning doves are prolific breeders, capable of raising up to six broods per year.
March 31st. Twigs, day one on the nest.
Sally. This is the approximate location the first time they got spooked and both flew off. So, again, days before and at times like these they were perfectly fine with me nearby. I was over 45 feet away for these photos. Do you sense I don't want to take complete responsibility for them taking off and leaving an egg overnight?
This is Sally, taken close to 7 PM. They seemed to transition on nest sitting duty a little past sunset right around the last hints of daylight. There are some markings that defiantly indicate to me which bird is which. They're not always obvious.
Sally, this was taken from my side yard. I was taking out some trash and she was up on the pinnacle of the roof over the center of the kitchen. She hung out in this spot for over 20 minutes.
That's it for now. The gaps in photo taking were up to them. It was been significantly warmer for a couple of days and perhaps they had a preference to be down below and in the shade rather than up on the wall. I just took a break to check my mail and upon opening the front door I saw one of them at the edge of the driveway just under the Eremophila. I stopped, didn't check the mail and closed the door. I didn't get a good look but considering it was only 4:15 I'll assume it was Sally.
I am the mountain, Peace is my name
I am the river touched by the wind
I am the story, I never end
Love this report ! Like you, I am more and more focusing on the non-human centric world and find it calming. And …raccoons are total jerks!
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