This entry was posted on 7/3/2009 2:12 PM and is filed under uncategorized.

Friday July 3 2009
Last
Saturday, Ridecamp here was half full of rigs and people and horses and
dogs for the Almosta Bennett Hills endurance ride. I was roaming about
with my camera on the four-wheeler when I saw a killdeer run along the
ground.
I looked to where she was running away from, and moved
in that direction, and mama killdeer went lame, doing the broken wing
display, trying to draw me toward her and away from... her nest with 4
eggs.
Look a little closer at the top photo, in the center: four kildeer eggs.


It
took me a while to locate them, being well camouflaged in the rocks and
gravel, sticks and grass; and meanwhile, mama killdeer was flopping and
fluttering away, an injured bird in great distress.






To appease her, I backed away from the nest.
Which
happened to be not 10 feet from a big horse trailer that had just
missed it when it drove in and parked - rather an inconvenient
location! But then, how could nesting in the open on the ground
anywhere be convenient? It must work, because that's what they do, and
there sure are a lot of killdeer around here. (A couple years ago, we
discovered a killdeer nest right by our busy finish line - those
killdeer went on to hatch and fledge).
I got a couple of fencing
posts and roped off 2 sides of the nest so horses and rigs would keep
clear. Horses and riders and dogs went about their business all
weekend; mama killdeer went about her business, sitting on her nest.
In
their courtship, the male killdeer will make loud calls and sham
nest-scraping movements. The male builds the nest. (This one was merely
a little scraped out depression, though the placement among the
camouflage decor was great.) The male and female will share nest
duties... but I have yet to see two birds around this nest - you'd
think I'd see two of them at least once. Killdeer eat mostly insects,
and with all the dang flies around here, mama probably doesn't even
have to leave her nest to eat!
When the chicks hatch, they will
be downy, open-eyed, mobile at birth, and will find their own food
while following their parents. They should fledge in 25 days - fly
competently - so hopefully I'll catch the hatch and get to keep an eye
on the babies a while.
I rode Stormy close to her today (the
killdeer will do the distress show for humans and dogs, I've noticed,
but not for horses), a week later, and she's still sitting patiently on
her eggs. She didn't bat a bird's eyelash at us.
