
Length: 9-11 in.
Habitat: open forests, farmlands, suburbs, parks; sheltered areas with fruit on trees (winter).
The Robin, a member of the thrush family, is one of the most neighborly of birs. A pair will often build their nest—a neat cup of mud and grasses—on a branch of a dooryeard tree or on the ledge of a porch; and they hunt confidently for earthworms on the lawn and in the garden, regardless of human activities nearby. What they are looking for are the wireworms and crane-fly larvae that you have most certainly brought to the surface while turning the soil. Robins eat insects as well as worms; they also like fruits, both wild and cultivated.
Sneaking quietly into her newly complete nest at dawn, a female robin lays a single pale blue egg in the mud-and-grass cup, then steals awya again. she will return every morning for several days, depositing one egg each time until her clutch of four or five is complete.
Friday, February 26, 2010
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