Unknowingly my domestic helper snipped off the two yellowed leaves of the Hydrangea macrophylla bush where the bird nest was attached.
I held the nest wondering what to do with it when we heard the mother bird chirping frantically away on top of a tree nearby.
Hydrangea macrophylla
Bauhenia kockiana
22 Dec 2012: I then used some green garden twine and secured the nest to several stems of Hydrangea and to a metal stake for Bauhenia kockiana. I then tied the upper stems together so that the leaves arch over the nest forming a protective canopy to shelter them from the elements.
No sooner had I finished the job, it rained cats and dogs. Phew, just in time!
24 December 2012: As the babies nestled in the cramped nest, Santa and Rudolf, the red-nosed reindeer visited.
25 December 2012: The fluffy yellow down was beginning to show.
25 December 2012: The fluffy yellow down was beginning to show.
26 December 2012: I went to check on them early in the morning. Their feathers have grown longer and thicker.
27 December 2012 am: Both parents took care of their progenies. They constantly flew to and fro with grub in their beaks while at the same time chirping shrilly.
27 December 2012 am: Both parents took care of their progenies. They constantly flew to and fro with grub in their beaks while at the same time chirping shrilly.
The babies stirred from their sweet slumber. It was feeding time.
"God gives every bird its food, but he does not throw it into the nest"
~Josiah Gilbert Holland
"God gives every bird its food, but he does not throw it into the nest"
~Josiah Gilbert Holland
28 December 2012 pm
Nest Address: No 27, Hydrangea Lane, Lake Edge.
Nest Residents: Tweety, Peety and Weety
29 December 2012 pm: Early this morning, Tweety, Peety and Weety had flown the nest with mum. I was too late to record their maiden flight. Now, I'm suffering from empty-nest syndrome. The nest is framed by the Hydrangea, Jasmine and Bauhenia kockiana shrubs.