A nesting box designed for bluebirds will also accommodate
tree swallows. They are easy to find or if you have the skills you can make
your own.
I use metal wire fence posts to mount the nesting boxes.
Predators (mostly squirrels) can’t climb them easily. If they can get to the nest box squirrels
will chew at the entrance hole so they can get inside.
Bluebirds require more territory for nesting. Their boxes
need to be about 60 feet or more from each other. However bluebirds and tree
swallows will tolerate each other so put up nest boxes in pairs of two a few
feet apart. It’s very important to put the boxes at least 10 feet from cover
that can hide a predator.
This is how my boxes are arranged in the yard.
As you can see from the photos cats also can’t climb the
metal poles. She only tried this one time.
Tree swallows use aerial tactics when driving off cats. One will come from behind and get the cat’s attention while a second, or sometimes third bird swoops down and pecks the cat’s head. Now my cats avoid the tree swallows air space and hide under the porch furniture.
Tree swallows use aerial tactics when driving off cats. One will come from behind and get the cat’s attention while a second, or sometimes third bird swoops down and pecks the cat’s head. Now my cats avoid the tree swallows air space and hide under the porch furniture.
Duck flank feathers lining the nest with 4 white eggs.
Check out the video below. Sorry for the shaky camera, it’s
just an iPhone. You can see the little tree swallow poking his head out at the
end for just a second.
It’s almost time for the swallows to fly south. But blue
birds nest a second or even a third time.
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