Break on through to the other side - not

in #life7 years ago

Splat! Did an angel come to an untimely end against our living room window that fateful day? Thankfully not. African doves had a fascination with our house windows or what was behind them; we never got the opportunity to ask which. Some, not I, would say it was (spoiler alert) a miracle that they somehow survived.

In our previous home, we regularly saw evidence of doves colliding with our windows, and sometimes heard the impact - thwak! boing! those were big picture windows - which sounded like they were going full speed, yet miraculously we never found a corpse or even a stunned bird on the ground. Surely a bird with little crosses in its eyes, just like in the cartoons? No...sniff.

Bif! Bam! Pow!

Here was a typical episode - even though you can see the window needed a full cleaning, the poor old dove gave it a good clobber with its right wing. I was in another room at the time and heard the impact, but found only this eerie angel wing as evidence of a close encounter of the glass kind. My best guess is our feathered friend had a sore wing but no damage to his skull or teeny bird brain.

Wingsplat closeup

This gives you an idea of the window in context - you can see the wingprint just above the orchid. The window doesn't look so dirty from far away, so maybe the dove's eyesight wasn't good enough to pick out the furniture and lack of grass and garden within the living room - or perhaps the afternoon sunlight reflected off the window in such a way that it couldn't see the danger (or my beautiful orchid) in front of it.

Wingsplat perspective

And here's a splat pic from another day which shows this bird definitely didn't hit his head - rather the other end. Imagine, if you will, trying to put the brakes on in the air. Window 1, Dovebutt ouch. I could only imagine its expression on its surprised little bird face...I wish I'd seen it....

Brake

What kind of dove was it?

Now that's a good question. We'll never know. We had at least four kinds of doves regularly visiting this garden - the red-eyed dove, laughing dove, Cape turtle dove and mourning dove along with an alarming selection of large feral pigeons (those are big brutes). This video gives you an idea of the range of their appearance and calls.


Video source

The flocks and pairs often intermingle, so we regularly hear all of these sounds mixed as well. It makes it difficult to tell at any given time unless you know the dove types and their respective calls well which individuals are making which sound.

Just being silly today

So we can't tell which ones are the Kamikaze birds - whether it's the laughing doves doing a Joker, the mourning doves committing hara-kiri because they just can't deal with life any more...or whether all the different kinds of doves sometimes go for the window crash.

We moved to another home two years ago, also in Johannesburg, and still have at least those four types of doves regularly visiting the garden - but so far none has crashed into any of our windows that we know of. Could we unknowingly have been living in the middle of some mystical dove shrine, which drove them with an irresistible force to near death experiences? Or could they have been the equivalent of bird adrenaline junkies?

Or do they just have really bad eyesight and kinda small brains?

Sort:  

I assume branding yourself will help your #steemit content show up more in #googlesearch

That's such a good point, @bitcoin1488 - I realised earlier this year that #googlesearch doesn't have a cooking clue who @kiligirl is or that she's me. Now I have to figure out how to link the two profiles in the Google ether. For fun I google myself every couple of years, and I still get an amazing extreme skier in the US as a top result. In case you're wondering, that's not me 😜

It does really set the scene for this post with those sounds of the African doves.
I didn't realise such a bird could inflict such damange.
The damage doesn't seem to bad as you can see the wing like shape imprinted into the window as if it was intentional.
Birds normally have good spatial awareness but it doesn't seem like it in this case haha
Great Post @kiligirl

Thanks, and good to see you, @arckrai - I thought I was only going to see spammers tonight 😜. We used to be amazed the windows didn't break. We were even more amazed not to see little dove corpses lying there....

che minchiata!

Well, birdbrain, perhaps :-)

Haha @kiligirl! This is hilarious and well written! Definitely following you now! Check out a funny original film I posted today! https://steemit.com/story/@stanhopeofficial/three-goats-gruff-an-original-short-film

Thank you, @stanhopeofficial - glad you enjoyed it 😊

Great post!!
A bit entertaining and mysterious @kiligirl :)

Gee, thanks, @awesome-seven. Glad you enjoyed it 😊

Hi Kiligirl a fun post. We used to have cardinals that did the same thing. No hari kari. Just narcissistict little critters. Who knows why the birds are so unpredictable? Or is that " I know why the caged bird sings". 🐓🐓

Thanks, @mother2chicks 😊. Somehow that was the story which insisted on coming out yesterday. And that was deep...I remember the quote, but not where it comes from. Was it a film title?

I liked your post . We often watch the birds as they tell us lots of things. We have shiny metal roof on the house which many birds fly in to. Perhaps a reflection of the sky. My Grandmother would say similar things about birds against a window. Angels as you know are everywhere. Maya Angelou. Wrote the book.. "I know why the caged bird sings". 🐓🐓 aka Ellie Mae

Thanks, my friend - the birds do tell us a lot. We must make their lives difficult at times even though some, like these doves, look like they've come to depend on us. Maybe your roof is a reflection of the sky. And oh my gosh, Maya Angelou, of course...how could I forget? Not concentrating! Have a blissful day, Ellie Mae 🐓 🐓

Enjoyed the Blog. In mating season they could see thier own reflection which would be perceived as a fight and flies directly at it without seeing the actual threat. It could be possible the birds don't see windows as a barrier, without a reflection. Windows are just bad news for some...

Thanks, @covey (sounds like there may be a dovecote pun hiding in there if I could just coax it out). You could be right. And indeed, Windows are bad news for some - lol.

A Dovecote, Oh right, What a magician's bird wears to keep warm? :-) Oh you said pun... oops

Up to about 1 billion birds die from window strikes in the U.S. each year, this happens all the time and it kills fit as well as unfit birds. Looking at your photos, it is perfectly possible that birds see the reflection of your trees in the window as they approach (beautiful garden by the way), which misleads them into thinking they are heading for the trees...

Here's a website with some tips on how to prevent this from happening again.

Thanks for the thoughtful response, @fitzgibbon. Interestingly, they also crashed into windows on the other side of the house with no potential for garden reflection. We've since moved as I said in the post and don't experience it any more. Perhaps your advice can help others! All the best.

Hello. I liked the video. let's take care of nature
Follow me

i've heard aboud johannesburg , its a good place i think...

Lots of birds!

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.29
TRX 0.11
JST 0.033
BTC 63945.57
ETH 3135.76
USDT 1.00
SBD 4.00