Today is Earth Day, and the question has been asked all day... What are YOU going to do for Earth Day to make a permanent difference, in your life and into your future?
Earlier today, Joe posted a picture of a beautiful Indigo Bunting.
How many do you have in your backyard?
Most of you will not be able to say you have any. I thought I would post a little known bit of history about why we don't have them.
My 93 year old Grandfather, grew up during some of Americas hardest times and lived during some of it's best and he has watched and experienced first hand the loss of a lot of wildlife. He shared the following with me ...
If you want blue birds you have to provide the proper shelter for them. Blue Birds are attracted to areas that have places to nest that are about 5-7ft. off of the ground. He added...
After America took to the roads in automobiles and less and less people kept horses; people did not keep their pastures fenced anymore.
Rotten Fence posts are a favorite place for blue birds to nest. With the disappearance of fence post from our nations landscape, came the disappearance of Blue Bird habitat.
Yes, of course there are rotten trees that have holes somewhere around that height, but they aren't consistent like the consistency of the fence posts around a horse pasture.
In the early 1980 bluebirds had almost disappeared from North America.
When the wooden fence post phenomenon was recognized; ecologists started hanging bluebird houses 5-7ft off of the ground all over the country.
The Boy Scouts played a huge role in getting these houses hung.
You are now probably wondering; What about the Blue Bird population before Europeans took over the continent and started building fences?
Read on Europeans brought something with them that Native Peoples did not keep.
Bluebirds are easy prey for domestic cats.
Because they nest so low to the ground cats can rob their nests, and when the bird is entering and exiting the nest they swoop down just low enough for a waiting kitty to snatch them.
This brings us back to the original question; What Can YOU do for Earth Day?
Keep your Cat in the House !
Domestic cats let outside will kill something whether they are hungry or not. They are predators, it is sport, and they usually don't eat what they kill.
Cats have no enemy in the wild that they cannot escape other than man, and the introduction of them into our ecosystem is one of the most irresponsible things that we as humans can do.
It is easy, it is free, and it will have a profound impact on the environment. In a couple of years you may even see Bunnies and lots of different Song Birds in your backyard.