Friday, January 18, 2019

TIMBERDOODLE


THE TIMBERDOODLE

This bird, also known as a woodcock, stays hidden until dusk or dawn's
dim light and like to be around damp pine woods and hardwood swamps.
They feed day or night, probing in soft soil with their very long bills for
earthworms . It's nest are depressions on flat ground in woods or thickets
and it's eggs are mostly eaten by snakes. Young, just hatched birds, leave
the nest within an hour of being hatched. A nest usually contains four eggs.

The most interesting action of this fowl is it's sky dancing during the
spring courtship where it selects a breeding ground to sing and dance
right after nightfall . After five minutes of beeping, it flushes, rises fast to
fifty feet, it's wings create a musical twitter, flying in wide circles, then
hovers as he pours forth a series of chirps and he glides to the ground in
a zig zag course to the spot he launched himself seconds before.

The Timberdoodle migrates south in fall to southeastern marshes.


Abstract: “Blackwater” National Wildlife Refuge, Dorchester county
Maryland, by Brook Meanley

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