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Sunday, May 4, 2014

Summer Guest


In Maine we have a word for those who stay in-state for the summer, then head south for the cold weather: snowbirds. Looks like I will have  literal snowbird staying with me this summer! I just noticed a tangle of grasses in the eaves of the summer studio yesterday; when I had a chance to look again, there's a full nest, and a robin sitting on it! Not sure if there are eggs yet, and I'm not inclined to disturb her to find out.

How long do robins gestate, anyway, and then how long to fledge? The summer studio is only a few feet away from the kiln, and I'm worried that when I fire the activity, or the heat and roar of the kiln, will frighten her off the nest. Or possibly it won't bother her in the least; after all she did build the nest right during hte pottery tour, when folks were walking in and out of the shed all day long.

Speaking of the tour! It's the last half hour, and I am prepared to say I'm very pleased with our turnout and sales. Our numbers were much closer to my hopes than my fears, despite on-and-off rain on Sunday. Hard work rewarded, always a happy end to a story.

And someday, when all this is over, I will clean my house. But not right now; right now I am watching a robin sit her nest.

UPDATE: I am hearing and reading stories of robins' incredible nest fidelity, including a story of a robin who continued to tend her nest on a joint of a crane which was in use during her gestation, and another on a moving train - the robin went with the train to its various destinations. As long as the nest itself isn't disturbed, the kiln is probably not going to be too disruptive!

2 comments:

  1. There's something really neat about the way birds place their nests. I've had phoebes under the deck and house wrens nest in deck hanging planters.

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  2. Carolina Wrens like to nest in my kiln room, they don't seem to bothered by my activities, hopefully your guest won't be either.

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