海角大神

We await the new tenants

We鈥檝e had chickadees in our birdhouse for years. Now there鈥檚 something new.

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Reiner Bernhardt/Picture-Alliance/DPA/AP
Eurasian nuthatch

The birds are all spiffed up in their spring suits and zipping around like mad. The males look sharp and they know it. Everyone鈥檚 in motion. They鈥檙e feinting, they鈥檙e flirting. There are rivals to rout and ladies to woo, and every fine-feathered one has an opinion about what constitutes his own personal space.

Spend any time at our window and the playground hierarchy becomes clear: Chickadees push out goldfinches. Juncos get the best of chickadees. Song sparrows sweep out the juncos, and those give way to scrub jays. Anybody gets to chase the robins. They鈥檙e sludgy; it鈥檚 probably all the worms. And oddly enough, the tiny bushtits can write their own ticket. They鈥檙e small, but plural. You can鈥檛 have just one bushtit. So if a bustle of bushtits shows up, all the other birds stand by, sullen, like grumpy old men stranded on a park bench when the kindergarten lets out. They have no idea what to do about it all.

Which means it鈥檚 spring, and it鈥檚 time to rent out the birdhouse again. The nesting box we鈥檝e mounted just outside the window has been occupied by chickadees for the past six years. We believe their names are Marge and Studley Windowson. We can鈥檛 tell them apart, but apparently they鈥檙e not at a loss about it. They have eked out baby chickadees successfully every year but one. We鈥檙e very proud of them.

Last season was a tough one. Nobody in the country seems to be able to count on their customary weather anymore, and we鈥檙e no exception. Our winter and spring rains never materialized, and although some people of weak character seemed to approve of that, the rest of us got edgy.聽

Sure enough, Marge and Studley were ragged and thin by the time their babies left the nest. The insect harvest was all out of whack, and there wasn鈥檛 enough to go around, it seemed. There鈥檚 not much that鈥檚 sorrier than a skinny chickadee. But they made it through.

So we were happy to see them again this year. They checked out the nesting box right on schedule and figured they鈥檇 wait before putting in an offer. They鈥檝e got time. This place is always available. They wouldn鈥檛 be hauling in furniture for a few weeks, anyway.

But then a pair of red-breasted nuthatches swung by. And they were serious. They were measuring it up, pecking at the rafters, and consulting with each other from a nearby branch. And they had cash in hand.

It could still go either way, but it鈥檚 not looking good for Marge and Studley. They no sooner show up in the tree than they are introduced to the pointy end of a nuthatch. We feel bad for them. We thought about putting up another box in the same tree, so we can continue to monitor it from our window. But we decided against it.

It turns out zoning laws apply. Most birds are pretty particular about housing density. There鈥檚 only so much energy they want to expend swatting intruders. And it鈥檚 hard enough snagging 500 bugs a day without having to compete for them. So we鈥檒l stick with the one box and take what comes. I鈥檓 starting to root for the nuthatches. I can tell them apart.

Now it鈥檚 looking more and more as though I鈥檒l get my way. One of the nuthatches has started bringing in the mattress, which comes in several pieces (some assembly required). If her boyfriend shows up with a tiny Allen wrench, I think we can ink the deal.

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