Years ago my folks put a bluebird box out along the edge of the woods behind their house hoping to have bluebirds move in. (One of the ones with the front that can be opened up so you can clean the old nest out.) Alas, no luck. Though bluebirds would occasionally stop by to visit the bird feeder, they apparently had a different realestate agent, and none have ever moved in.
Well, yesterday, while I was taking a break from doing some weeding in their backyard, my dad came around to look at a few of the plants by the shed at the back of their property. We were just chatting for a bit, standing next to said bluebird box, when he said something along the lines of "I guess I may as well take this box down -- nothing but the earwigs seems to use it." For some reason, as he said this, he dropped the latch and opened the front panel. Lo and behold, there was a nest with a black-capped chickadee. Don't know who was more surprised. My dad, me or the poor bird who was probably wondering "What the hell is going on here!?"
I'm assuming it was a fully fledged but not yet flying juvenille as I would have expected that if that was momma, she would have panicked and flown the coop when panel was lifted and she was suddenly exposed, yes?
So my question is, when should the nest box be cleaned out? I'm thinking either late fall or early spring.
Would they likely use the box over the winter as shelter? And if so should the nest be left there until spring?
Would have gone back and taken a pic, but figured if the first exposure didn't scare the lil thing off, why push our luck?




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