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Hello! Is there anyone out there?
I’ve always been a fan of architect Buckminster Fuller’s geodesic domes, but those had flat bottoms. How about a completely round home? No corners to lose things in.
Tree swallow nesting in the Tennessee Valley, and even our state, is a fairly recent occurrence.
According to Chuck Nicholson, author of the "Atlas of Breeding Bird of Tennessee," published by UT Press, the first recorded tree swallow nest in Tennessee was discovered in 1918 at Reelfoot Lake. It wasn’t until 1968 that other nests were documented, this time in Anderson and Maury Counties. After that, nests have been reported every year and since the late 1980s, the nesting population has increased dramatically. Today, they’re fairly common in throughout the state.
Tree swallows nest in empty cavities, hollow trees, bluebird boxes or even empty round gourds. Unlike their cousins, the colony-loving purple martins, the dark blue-green backed tree swallows prefer to build their nests isolated from other swallows.
- Photo taken at Ijams Nature Center
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Wednesday, May 5, 2010
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2 comments:
These guys are hassling our purple martins! First they took over a bluebird box a few years ago. They arrived before the martins this year and are quite stubborn. I hope the pole will sucessfully produce a brood of each.
So do I.
Let me know. Send me a follow up.
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