Bird Seeing

Dedicated to the idea that birds are worth understanding from their point of view. It should be obvious that most of my bird watching is done in a small courtyard described in The Phantom Bird Feeder. We've noted that within a species there is a wide range of behavior related to individual bird's personality. Either inadvertently or purposefully, we conduct little experiments observing the range of reactions across species and within the species.

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Location: Winston Salem, North Carolina, United States

Monday, September 11, 2006

Finches Fighting

House finches are usually social birds. By this, I mean that they frequently arrive at a feeding station together, leave together, and that they allow each other's presence more or less. They even intermingle with gold finches which are somewhat smaller.

The civility comes close to that of a bunch of kindergarten children in that they eat as a group, but there is some nudging and shoving. This is easier to observe at cylindrical feeders with multiple holes than at dishes. It isn't unusual that one will land on another to chase it away from a feeding hole. Typically this works and the attacker gets the feeding hole. The other flies up to a nearby roosting point, checks out other places on the feeder and then goes to one of those that is free.

However, lately, we have observed several fights among the finches. While I can't be absolutely certain, it appears to mostly occur between male house finches.

Whether at the feeder or the dish, they will all seem to be peacefully eating until suddenly, two finches will rise straight up several feet in the air, facing each other and flapping their wings. It appears to be an aerial shoving match since neither bird seems to make forward progress and both birds seem to be in each other's face.

The process is quick, explosive, and unpredictable. Weeks can go by without any fights and then several appear in a day. It's difficult to videotape these experiences because of the unpredicabilityl The fight seems to be over when one or both birds turn away to land. I suppose the winner is the one that returns to the feeder fastest.

I wonder why this kind of activity appears in bursts. I have a suspicion that it is juveniles, but that is harder to tell with finches than some of the other birds.

Do Cardinals dare each other?

This article doesn't have a neat conclusion. I've been observing birds in our yard lately (Early September, 2006).


I noticed that two cardinals who seemed to be "daring" each other to engage in "dangerous" behavior. The first cardinal was a juvenile and the second appeared to be a young adult (as judged by the color of their beaks).


First the juvenile cardinal landed in the dish and just sat there seemingly to wait for the Dove to do something. When the dove continued to eat peacefully, the juvenile cardinal took two or three pecks at the sunflower seed and then flew off. A second cardinal arrived almost immediately. It too waited a moment or two (but less time than the first) and then it took one peck at the seeds and flew off

It doesn't sound like very strange behavior unless you consider what Cardinals typically do.

Cardinals don't typically like to share the food dish with other birds—particularly larger ones. (They will occasionally tolerate finches). As it happens, doves are usually peaceful. However, Doves are large for backyard birds and the mere act of raising a wing will scare off most birds and animals. Raising the wing makes the Dove look large and the down stroke of a dove wing carries quite a bit of force. Squirrels even avoid doves unless they are really hungry. (Oddly, house finches will routinely join doves). There isn't much space left after an adult dove gets in the feed dish, so cardinals avoid them. So the first thing that made the above observation strange was the mere act a cardinal of landing in the dish with the dove. The fact that two did it in quick succession was more than doubly unusual.

Cardinals usually take quite a while eating in a sunflower dish. Some birds (Chickadees and Blue Jays for example) will come to the dish, grab a seed or two and then go off to eat elsewhere. That's because these birds have to exert quite an effort to crack the seed in order to eat the heart. But Cardinals can easily crack the seed in their mouths. When Cardinals encounter sunflower seed, they frequently will sit and gorge until they are full or until something comes along to frighten them. Taking only one or two bites is unusual for cardinals. The fact that the two birds did this in quick succession was also unusual.

It is not unusual for juvenile cardinals to engage in intimidation battles. They not only do it with others of their species, but at least on one occasion I observed a juvenile successfully face down a timid Jay. (Only to be scared off by a larger more intimidating Jay). At the time, I took this to be the foolishness of youth, but perhaps juvenile cardinals must 'show their courage" some how. If so, it would surprise me, because cardinals don't appear to be that socially conscious Perhaps it is some sort of pre-mating demonstration.

But as I said, don't have a neat conclusion on this one.