Why any House Sparrow would want to build a nest in a tree instead of the innumerable cross-bars of stop lights, I don’t know. But there you go. Passer domesticus nests are big affairs, considering the size of the birds, but they are usually inside a human-made structure, so we don’t see the weaver-y details. That’s the proud papa on the left there, on the branch dipping down.
The clumpy, grassy nest; unseen is the hole in the side for entry.
Moving up in scale… While searching for the Common Ravens often seen around Bush Terminal Park, I happened to notice an Osprey. Then another. They’re nesting on the industrial coast of Brooklyn! I think this is a first for this part of the city. Nesting platforms were put up in Brooklyn Bridge Park and Bush Terminal Park last year, but have had no takers. (I think the one in BBP is far too close to the teeming shore.) But these very tall lights north of Bush Terminal, over an unused parking lot, seem to fit the bill. The birds were gathering nesting material while I watched through a chain link fence. You can see a piece of plastic in the nest above. One bird was flying with what looked like a large sheet of cardboard, and, although a very large bird, was having trouble with the aerodynamics of it. In fact, the bird barely seemed to be moving in the air; it released the load before getting up to the nest.
It turns out that I can see the nest from up here in my own nest on the Harbor Hill Moraine; “see” is generous here, as it’s at the limit of my various lenses, with plenty of heat distortion:
I need a high-end spotting scope.
With this morning’s dawn’s early light and a helpful barge’s white cabin behind the nest. That’s Ellis Island’s southern end across the Upper Harbor.
Two Nests
6 responses to “Two Nests”
-
[…] But recovery has been so successful they are now considered of Least Concern on the world-scale. They also nest right here in Brooklyn.Last week, we went down to Virginia’s Middle Peninsula and saw oodles of them. Yes, oodles, […]
-
[…] left by the well-meaning but wrong-headed.There is very little traffic there on weekends. The Osprey in the nearby nest are strictly […]
-
[…] stumbled upon this new nest back in April. While Osprey nest at Marine Park and Jamaica Bay, this is the first time any have set up […]
-
[…] spring, a pair of Osprey nested on this very tall light post above the parking lot at the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal. […]
-
[…] 2016, a pair of Osprey nested on a light tower at the South Brooklyn Marine Terminal, sorta-kinda in sight of my apartment. There were young, but no repeat performance. […]
-
[…] This was on the long 5th Avenue border of Green-Wood. Along this same stretch, I’ve come across an all-natural, wild House Sparrow nests, a football-shaped conglomerations of woven material. Here’s another. […]
Leave a reply to Sunset Park Osprey | Backyard and Beyond Cancel reply