A holiday is a good day to look for sighting birds. Around 6 am today, as I walked in the courtyard, I noticed a Magpie Robin on the lawn with a dragon fly between its beaks. I have watched a pair of Robins for a while around our cottage, but did not look enough to follow their activity.
I watched this Robin fly into the foliage of the nutmeg tree and while waiting to spot it again, I heard a screeching bird call. That was a signal to me of offsprings of this bird nesting in the tree. I failed to trace the bird as the sun had not risen and the thick foliage was still in darkness. I wandered in the garden for a while and returned to the same spot. That is when I spotted the parent birds, one perched on a pipe and the the other in the adjacent shrub.
I waited quietly on this spot. The Robin in the bush whose bird call alerted me, gathered a berry and flew in to the foliage of the nutmeg tree. I noticed the other adult Robin following its pair in to the foliage.
After a while of search I noticed a young bird adjacent to a large hollow on the trunk, which made it certain that it was the nesting place of this family (Photo 4).
By then the sun had arisen and the two other young birds appeared on the courtyard sitting close to each other with their mouths open, one on a pipe and another on a cable. They were waiting for their feed from the adult birds.
One of the adult birds appeared on the court yard of our cottage and soon one of the young birds flew down from the pipe with the mouth open waiting for a feed. The shutter noise of the camera disturbed them and they flew away back into the foliage of the tree.
I sat at vantage point to see if the birds would return to their nest. I noticed one of the young birds at the mouth of the nest. Th eaters were still around, but hidden to my sight.
By then I had spent three hours following the birds between the nutmeg tree and the shrubs in the courtyard yard. I retreated not because I was tired, but because the birds appeared restless with my presence and shutter noise of the camera. Robins are human friendly and they choose to nest in the trees or in the gaps or cervices in the walls of buildings.
All the three offsprings are able to fly short distances and are hopefully ready to fend for themselves.
So the the adult birds woeful force them to fly away, while the adults too would leave the nest and separate form each other.
What was fascinating about this bird sighting experience was to watch the behaviour of the young birds. They keep their mouth open while waiting for their feed.
It is the same with human babies as well. They too open their mouth and search for the feed when they feel hungry!
There is certainty of provision! It is in asking, one receives according to the words of Jesus of Nazareth.
To be able to ask is a privilege and to give in response to asking is a responsibility!
All of us are providers... it is a solemn responsibility !
M.C.Mathew(text and photo)
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