Cissie with egg shell - has a baby hatched?
Tuesday 28th July 2015 – Before Sultan took over
– nice and early for him at about 11am – I peeped in again at Cissie and talked
softly to her. As she shifted position, I caught a glimpse of a tiny wriggling
yellow downy baby!
Below, has my Grace, right, teamed up with handsome new male, Snowdon?
I hope they will be as happy as we are, says Cissie, below, with Sultan
By Wednesday there seemed more shell in the nest, so I was
pretty sure the other egg had hatched too! I am so thrilled! My Cissie, with
her problems, had still managed to hatch two live babies!
Thursday 30.7.15 – All goes well. Sultan comes to the hutch
earlier now there are babies, so Cissie gets longer free time than when they
were sitting on the eggs. I’m glad that the more competent bird is on the nest
during the day, feeding the babies. Mind you, Cissie, despite her disability,
is coping magnificantly with the new responsibility– I am proud of her!
Below, I gently move Cissie to get photos of the new little ones
Cissie’s story, in brief, so far:- On the 19th Jan ‘14, I picked Cissie up from the
lawn. She was a very unremarkable little pigeon, obviously very young, probably
quite newly fledged and she had paramyxovirus. I called her Narcissus as, at the time, I had a male with PMV
called Echo – she was soon shortened to Cissie. She was in quarantine for 6 weeks before being allowed out
in the garden to mix with the others, but she was a very scared and unsure
little bird. She eventually settled into her life as a flightless bird but has given
me at least two scares – both when she somehow managed to fly! One by flying up
to the roof, and down on the other side where the offices and the old mill wheel is - and deep water - I luckily found her on the pavement - and two when she flew or blew over the fence and
into the river – where I fished her out! Earlier this year she and Cloud started up a little girlie
kissy kissy relationship that didn’t get very far before Sultan arrived on the
scene – a big male with a racer’s ring. Cissie enticed him away from his first choice, Cloud, then
took over Cloud’s hutch and laid two eggs – one broke and one she hid. Then she
and Sultan started again, and here we are now, with two babies, aged two days
old today. (At a guess, Cissie is about 19-20 months old)
1st August 15 and already I am feeling a
Septembery tinge in the air. Cissie came out of the nestbox into the main hutch
early at about 9am and I wasn’t expecting this, but did manage to get a photo
of the babies alone.
I let her do her big morning poop on the ground, then fed
her quickly and put her back with them. One baby is much smaller than the
other, though I have seen this before with other siblings. They are both still
covered with downy yellow fluff, but I can now see dark patches and dark ends
to their beaks. Their parents are both grey pigeons so I am expecting them to
look similar. I’m calling the babies Tink and Pan – Tink’s the little one and I
am of course very much hoping she will continue to thrive and catch up in
weight. Although my little ‘chickens’
are hatched and I AM counting them – two!
....I realise that anything could happen. One thing in their favour is
that when they are shut in the hutch with mummy or daddy they are much safer
than little squabs in a normal nest or even the dove cote which is open to
possible predators – or falling out from! One thing that is worrying me is the
babies’ food. At present, baby pigeons get fed ‘crop milk’ – which is of course
nothing like milk, but is some sort of glandular secretion produced by the
parents. So this is fine.... but soon the babies go on to half cereals half
crop milk.... What is worrying me is that I feed Cissie (as I have to) and
therefore she is not choosing what to eat so it may not be right for the
babies. I can only hope that Sultan is feeding them correctly.
Sultan went on the nest later today at 11.30am and an hour
and a half later I saw him come out into the hutch – oh no mate, you’re not
coming out now! Luckily, he didn’t try to – he ate, drank – then having thought
about and realised he was stuck inside, crouched and did a poop - he doesn’t like to on his own doorstep, but
needs must! - I will clean up later. I’m not going to the hutch now and letting
him think he can come out so early – this is Cissie’s free time and she
deserves it!
Sun 2.8.15 – Tink and Pan are now about 6 days old and are
getting big; with Pan still bigger. They seem fine and I love to look in on them
every day after I’ve fed Cissie. I don’t disturb Sultan when he’s in charge as although he is very tolerant of
me, he doesn’t know me like Cissie does. I was telling someone about Sultan and
Cissie, and she suggested that maybe Sultan is having a holiday romance, and
will head off back to his owner and loft when summer turns to autumn. Well, we’ll
see.....
Above and below, Cissie re-arranges her nest
Below, the cote doves, surprisingly, sit with the homies -
Left to right, Chino, Cissie, Lucky, Cloud (sitting) and Lottie below Cloud
Mon 3.8,15 – Pan is
just beginning to open his eyes, but Tink not quite yet, as she is obviously
the younger sibling. The lovely thing about having them in the hutch is that I
can just open the door as see the entirely, without having to peer into or
delve into the dovecote. I’ve only had this once before when Jose and Happy
reared baby Pearl in the old hutch.
I saw the kite again today, soaring overhead.....And also some little cuties popping about in the leaves – I am
pretty sure they were juvenile Long-Tailed Tits and they were so adorable, probably just fledged.
Later – Tink’s eyes are now opening. I saw Cissie feeding them
this afternoon..... it’s so awkward about the food, I’m not sure what to do. I
gave Cissie an extra feed today and have
put a jam jar of smaller grains in the hutch for her to attempt to get grain
for herself and the babies. I am worried about them being underfed, especially
Tink, who seems half the size of Pan – but having said that they both are
growing and seem healthy enough.
You can see the difference between the babies - Pan, on the left, is far bigger
Below, Cissie manages to control her head 'wobble' to feed the babies.....
When I went shopping I saw someone had dumped a hutch down
our little country road. We do get some fly tipping but not that much, thank
goodness. The hutch seemed more or less ok, so I rang hubby at work and asked
him to have a look when he came home. When he arrived he had it in the pick up –
the deal being that I get rid of the run (which he hates because it is ‘messy’
he says). The hutch will probably be more useful to me than the run – although of
course I won’t have that ‘outside’ facility, but the birds don’t actually use
it that much. The hutch will need a huge clean out which I will have to tackle
tomorrow – it’s full of old dirty rabbit straw. It is appalling that someone would
just chuck something like this in a little local road but I will be able to put
it to good use.
If I had wanted to
get rid of it I would’ve put in on Gumtree for ten or twenty pounds, buyer
collects and it would’ve sold.
Lucky built a new nest immediately and he and Lottie have
been sitting in it at times and ignoring it at others. I expect they will have
new eggs soon.
Tink and Pan again
And the kite, way up overhead
Tuesday 4.8.15 - The babies, or at least Pan, are roughly a week old today, and can be left for short periods. Normally the parents would fly in and out of the cote as they see fit, but I have to monitor what Cissie is doing and open the front for Sultan if he wants to go in. It's awkward, but worth it as I love these babies and want the best for them. I don't want to leave the door open unless I have to at least until the babies are two weeks old - oh well I have managed so far!
Above, Tink and below, Pan
Lucky built a new nest immediately and he and Lottie have
been sitting in it at times and ignoring it at others. I expect they will have
new eggs before the end of the summer.
Later...... Lottie’s staying the night!
Wed 5.8.15 – One new egg this morning. And today's photos of our lovely babies. The light across them is the chink of sun coming through when I opened the nestbox side door.
The homies rest together in the afternoon - L to R Cloud, Cisse, Chino
2 comments:
Faith! SO happy about the TWO babies of Cissie and Sultan! I hope they make it. About what to feed the parents whilst they are rearing the babies - when my pigeons are on a nest, I just keep feeding them peanuts, which is high in protein and fat, similar to pigeon milk. The parents need that nutrition and they love it.
I believe the enzyme they secrete in their crops also softens food there, so that they can feed that to the squabs. So no matter what the parents are eating (almost), as long as they do have food, they can feed their babies. That helps to explain how pigeons have come to dominate cities around the world - they adapt very well.
If Cissie feeds herself, a "buffet" of peanuts in one bowl and a separate bowl seeds, grains, and a small amount of grit should be good.I hope this is helpful.
What do you feed the small squabs born in the dovecote when you "top up" their parents feedings? This formula could be used with Tink and Pan, and would be good to review in an upcoming post. Thank you for a beautiful blog!!! xx
Yes, thank you Faith! I left a comment on PC but thought I ought to get around to leaving one here. Don't the chicks look like dodos? Strange to think that one day they will fly. Glad things are in the up.
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