canberrabirds

Nesting materials

To: "" <>, "" <>
Subject: Nesting materials
From: Chris Davey <>
Date: Tue, 5 Oct 2021 10:19:15 +0000

We have a poodle which does not shed so when next my wife cuts my hair she tells me that it will go out in an old cloth peg bag for an offering. I wonder if birds would like to line their nest with white hair. Possibly not.

 

From: Canberrabirds [ On Behalf Of Lia Battisson
Sent: Tuesday, 5 October 2021 12:47 PM
To:
Subject: Re: [Canberrabirds] Nesting materials

 

And I was on a trip with Ian Fraser in Central Australia and witnessed a honeyeater trying to take hair from his beard!

Lia

 

 

From: Canberrabirds On Behalf Of Philip Veerman
Sent: 5 October 2021 11:59 AM
To:
Subject: Re: [Canberrabirds] Nesting materials

 

Various birds (from memory honeyeaters) have even been known to take hair of live kangaroos, koalas, sheep……….

 

From: Canberrabirds On Behalf Of Anthony Overs via Canberrabirds
Sent: Tuesday, 5 October, 2021 11:37 AM
To: Helen Cross
Cc: Canberra birds
Subject: Re: [Canberrabirds] Nesting materials

 

Excellent!

 

That reminds me of the nest workshop outings to Campbell Park. The sheep in the paddock next to the reserve scratch themselves on the fences, leaving wool on posts and barbed wire. We’ve seen that wool used to line nests of species like Red Wattlebird, Noisy Friarbird, Olive-backed Oriole, Weebill, and Grey Fantail (Jack Holland, were there others??). 

 

Anthony 

 

 

On 5 Oct 2021, at 10:53 am, Helen Cross <> wrote:



Grey Fantails and White-throated Gerygones have used shed horse hair in their nests from the local agistment paddocks.

 

Cheers

Helen

 

On Mon, 4 Oct 2021, 6:59 pm Anthony Overs via Canberrabirds, <> wrote:

Hi all

I leave some dog hair in an old clothes peg basket in the front yard for birds to collect for nesting materials. In the past, Superb Fairy-wrens, Eastern Spinebills and Red Wattlebirds have collected hair.

Today, the wattlebirds were taking some; they are building again after successfully raising two young.

Two new birds took some hair today. A Willie Wagtail, from one of the two pairs that live very close by, took some hair on two occasions. I didn’t see where the bird went though. A female Magpie-lark also took some hair on three occasions; the first time, she collected a bit of grass as well as the hair, dunked the whole lot in the bird bath, then took it straight up to the nest under construction just across the street.

Another donation was quickly brushed out of the dog and put in the basket!

Anthony

 


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