Martins and the eclipse

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G Saner
Posts: 232
Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 3:37 pm
Location: TX/Kerrville
Martin Colony History: Fort Worth, TX (1967-1976), The Colony, TX (1981-1985), Carrollton, TX (1986-2013), Kerrville, TX (2015-present).

Two SuperGourd poles (12 gourds on each) at River Point Assisted Living Center.

My colony is not in my backyard but at an assisted living center several miles away. Our little town is in the path of the eclipse coming on April 8th. We are expecting over 4 minutes of darkness. I will not be leaving my own home due to the predicted crowds that will be visiting. I have asked the assisted living center to give me a report on how the martins react to the darkness. All the patio chairs are already placed next to the gourd poles for resident viewing of the eclipse so they should have an excellent place to see the colony.

My guess is that the martins will return to the gourds as if it is dusk. Has anyone observed their colony behavior during a prior eclipse?
G Saner
C.C.Martins
Posts: 2737
Joined: Fri Apr 14, 2017 11:15 am
Location: Corpus Christi Tx
Martin Colony History: 2016- Visitors.
2017- 5 pair. 15 fledged
2018- 18 pair. 85 fledged
2019- 17 pair. 81 fledged
2020- 25 pair. 111 fledged
2021- 28 pair. 118 fledged
2022- 33 pair. 151 fledged
2023- 33 pair. 165 fledged
2024:
HOSP: 35 Starlings: 23
Home colony: mix natural, super, Troyer and excluder gourds, enlarged compartment house. All SREH.
Satellite colony: Oso Bay Preserve: 36 PMCA excluder gourds, 6 room trio mini castle with troyer tunnels and enlarged compartments.
2019: Visitors
2020: 3 pair, 11 fledged
2021: 10 pair, 30 fledged
2022: 11 pair, 35 fledged
2023: 18 pair, 101 fledged
2024
PMCA member

Be interesting! I suspect your right, they will come home. Our eclipse was in Oct last year, eerily quiet. Good thinking on not moving around on the streets, going to be crazy busy.
A good house sparrow is a dead house sparrow.
Dave Reynolds
Posts: 2297
Joined: Mon Jan 31, 2011 4:35 pm
Location: Little Hocking, Oh.
Martin Colony History: 2017 Visitors
Satellite Site “Oxbow Golf Course”..
2018 - 15 Pair, 58 Eggs, 36 Fledged
2019 - 26 Pair, 128 Eggs, 97 Fledged
2020 - 30 Pair, 156 Eggs, 137 Fledged
2021 - 30 Pair, 162 Eggs, 144 Fledged
2022 - 27 Pair, 146 Eggs, 125 Fledged
2023 - 31 Pair, 157 Eggs, 130 Fledged

Home Site "Little Hocking, Ohio".
2019 - 1 Pair, 5 Eggs, 5 Fledged
2020 - 1 Pair, 4 Eggs, 4 Fledged
2021 - 8 Pair, 39 Eggs, 36 Fledged
2022 - 13 Pair 64 Eggs, 46 Fledged
2023 - 16 Pair, 89 Eggs, 84 Fledged

.. I’m not to sure what they will do, but my instinct tells me they will just fly around as if it is a very heavy cloudy day with out rain in site…. Just a thought

Dave
PMCA Member
Little Hocking, Ohio
flyin-lowe
Posts: 3563
Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 8:49 am
Location: Indiana/Henry Co.

We too are in the line of "totality" and from what I have been seeing even in totality it will not be total darkness, more like dusk or dawn. We had one a few years ago but not quite this strong. I was at our school with the kids so I have no idea what the martins did.
2024 HOSP count-20
2023 60+ pair, HOSP count-8
2022 60 nests with 262 eggs, HOSP count-14
2021 62 nest fledged aprox. 230, HOSP count-9
2020 42 nest, Fledged 164, HOSP count-8
2019- 31 Pair over 100 fledged
2018- 15 pair 49 fledged
2017 3 SY pair nested, 12 eggs total, fledged 10. 4 additional lone SY's
2016 1 pair fledged 4
2015 Visitors
2014 Visitors
2013 Moved 6 miles away, 1 pair fledged 2.
2012 30 pair fledged 100.
2011 12 pair 43 fledged.
2010 5 pair 14 fledged.
SSMartin
Posts: 420
Joined: Sun Jul 21, 2019 6:05 pm
Location: FL

Considering martins will fly in the dark doing the dawnsong before the sun even rises I doubt 4 minutes will have much affect on them.
Thomas Maddox
Posts: 246
Joined: Fri Jun 25, 2021 5:23 pm
Location: Sulphur, Louisiana

SSMartin wrote:
Sun Apr 07, 2024 12:52 am
Considering martins will fly in the dark doing the dawnsong before the sun even rises I doubt 4 minutes will have much affect on them.
I agree. Going to be cloudy here, so not much to see, but due to the clouds, the apocalypse has been canceled.
SSMartin
Posts: 420
Joined: Sun Jul 21, 2019 6:05 pm
Location: FL

:lol:

If anybody does witness any interesting behavior please report it here.
flyin-lowe
Posts: 3563
Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 8:49 am
Location: Indiana/Henry Co.

I didn't notice any major changes. It got fairly dark here for about 3 minutes (enough that the dusk to dawn lights came on) I could still hear them flying around, probably by the time they realized something was going on it was over. As soon as the sun started to peak back out it got daylight again very quickly.
2024 HOSP count-20
2023 60+ pair, HOSP count-8
2022 60 nests with 262 eggs, HOSP count-14
2021 62 nest fledged aprox. 230, HOSP count-9
2020 42 nest, Fledged 164, HOSP count-8
2019- 31 Pair over 100 fledged
2018- 15 pair 49 fledged
2017 3 SY pair nested, 12 eggs total, fledged 10. 4 additional lone SY's
2016 1 pair fledged 4
2015 Visitors
2014 Visitors
2013 Moved 6 miles away, 1 pair fledged 2.
2012 30 pair fledged 100.
2011 12 pair 43 fledged.
2010 5 pair 14 fledged.
defed
Posts: 256
Joined: Fri Jun 03, 2016 8:50 pm
Location: WNY
Martin Colony History: :
2022 - 1 pair, 5E, 4H, 4F
2023 - 2 pair, 9E, 5H, 5F

was too cloudy here to see anything....too bad because they said i was in one of the more ideal spots for totality. it still got very dark, very fast. i don't even have any martins back yet and if i did, i was at work during it.
G Saner
Posts: 232
Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 3:37 pm
Location: TX/Kerrville
Martin Colony History: Fort Worth, TX (1967-1976), The Colony, TX (1981-1985), Carrollton, TX (1986-2013), Kerrville, TX (2015-present).

Two SuperGourd poles (12 gourds on each) at River Point Assisted Living Center.

This is the reply I got from the Assisted Living Center staff about the martin behavior during the eclipse:

The Martins were very active and very vocal before the Eclipse. As the time of total totality approached, they became more calm and less vocal. During the Eclipse they were quiet and mostly inside the gourds, a few were perched outside. As the light started to break through, they started talking and coming out of their nest. it was very interesting to watch and observe!
G Saner
BillieJR
Posts: 755
Joined: Tue Apr 11, 2017 11:39 am
Location: Monroe, WI

Thanks for that eclipse update, G Saner. That was so interesting to hear how they reacted.
Billie from southern Wisconsin
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