Much to our surprise, there are three new eggs in the nest where we watched the curve billed thrashers fledge two chicks this spring. I was out in the front of the house taking pictures when I peeked in the nest in our cholla cactus and saw the eggs. In the photo, note the white strands of dental floss; we recycle our floss in the outdoors just for the reason that birds will build nests using string, floss and anything else they can find.
I’m not sure if thrashers raise multiple sets of chicks in a year; the bird book and Wikipedia were silent on that issue. We will be watching to see if these hatch in the next couple of weeks and get more pictures of thrasher chicks if we can. Click on the image to enlarge.
This image is now at the center of my desktop. Thanks.
Enjoy!
Kewl! But don’t let that Gopher Snake you saw earlier get near the nest. They may be great mousers, but they’re garbage cans: they’ll eat anything they can catch, kill, and swallow.
The last time we saw that gopher snake, it was being pecked on the tail by an adult thrasher.
I remember that. Guess Ma and Pa Thrasher can take care of their own.