|
![]() |
Attracting BluebirdsHow to invite bluebirds to nest in your birdhouse
I told myself it was OK if the bluebirds found a natural nesting cavity in the woods. But I longed for them to raise their family in the birdhouse, where I could see from the kitchen and the front door. Then I read that mealworms, which are usually sold as food for pet reptiles, would help persuade bluebirds to stay.
Within an hour The weather was cold and drizzly. I hadn't seen any bluebirds all day. I picked a dozen of the inch-long mealworms out of the box and carried them by hand to the birdhouse. They were dry and smooth, and although they tickled a bit when they wiggled, they weren't at all nasty to hold.
I'd read that it might not be good for bluebirds to give them too many mealworms, so I restrained myself until evening to put out another supply. The female caught on fast. As soon as I opened the door and did my fake bluebird whistle, she came down from a treetop to a branch near the birdhouse, and she landed on it before I got back to my house. Husband looks in fridge My husband, Michael, is not enthusiastic about things that wriggle in the kitchen, but he adapted with surprising speed. When he looked in the refrigerator for snacks, he discovered an open bin of oatmeal and mealworms. He stirred the contents with a finger, looking at the larvae of 976 darkling beetles. "For the bluebirds," I explained. "Don't worry. They can't crawl up the sides of the bin, and besides, they don't move much when they're cold." I took good care of my mealworms, except for contributing a few of them every day to the bluebirds. On alternate weekends I brought their bin out of the fridge for a day and a night so they could warm up and feed. I put a fresh slice of apple or potato in their bin, and they consumed everything but the peel. When human guests appeared unnerved at the sight of writhing mealworms in a bin on my kitchen sink, I explained that they were my pets. Bluebirds move in Although I was not particularly consistent about feeding the bluebirds at the same time every day, they knew when the mealworms were imminent. They didn't come around when I was headed for my car or a walk, but if I stepped out of the house whistling, with mealworms in my hand, the two birds flew toward the birdhouse from wherever they were in the woods.
One cool morning before I made the delivery, I looked out the living room window and saw the female bluebird perched on top of one of our feeders, eyeing me. Bluebirds aren't interested in millet, sunflower seeds, and thistle. I understood. She wanted mealworms. And clearly she understood where they came from. A few moments later, as I opened my door, she was waiting for me on the birdhouse. Real estate deal clinched On day three of the mealworm program, the female started carrying soft dry grass into the birdhouse. "The mealworms clinched the real estate deal," Michael commented. Soon I saw four pretty, sky-blue eggs inside.
The babies thrived. Of course, I cannot claim to know what bluebirds think. But a bluebird has looked me in the eye and communicated what she wanted. A wild, beautiful bird and I bridged a gap, to the immense satisfaction of us both. -- Diane Cooledge Porter Copyright 2005 by Diane Porter. Photos copyright 2005-2007 by Michael and Diane Porter
More Birding Stories by Diane |
|