do all martins use same nest material

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chickadee
Posts: 1128
Joined: Fri Mar 25, 2011 3:02 pm
Location: ohio

Just wondering if martins use the same nest material as every martin every where? So wondering if people could list stuff they see them use at their site. Here mine love straw and corn stalk.
John Miller
Posts: 4863
Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2004 9:11 pm
Location: St. Louis, MO

Martins seem to vary quite a bit. I think the females find something they like and keep going back.

The most interesting and good-choice material I've noticed over the years -- the martins at one our housing sites in Forest Park fly to upper large limbs of some tall cypress trees and work hard at stripping off bits of bark. I've seem some do this to the peely bark on tall sycamore as well. This seems like a good nest material, and a safe area to be collecting.


John M
flyin-lowe
Posts: 3788
Joined: Wed Mar 29, 2006 8:49 am
Location: Indiana/Henry Co.

I always put a base of pine straw down but the last to years the nest have been mainly made of strips of fodder from the corn field behind my house. I have never seen any mud either, but a lot of people report that.
2026 HOSP 26
2025 62 pair HOSP 20
2024 60 pair, HOSP 44
2023 60+ pair, HOSP 8
2022 60 nests with 262 eggs, HOSP 14
2021 62 pair, HOSP 9
2020 42 nest, HOSP 8
2019- 31 pair
2018- 15 pair 49 fledged
2017 3 SY pair, 12 eggs , fledged 10. 4 additional lone SY's
2016 1 pair fledged 4
2015 Visitors
2014 Visitors
2013 Moved 6 miles, 1 pair fledged 2.
2012 30 pair fledged 100.
2011 12 pair 43 fledged.
2010 5 pair 14 fledged.
dancingirl76
Posts: 94
Joined: Mon May 16, 2011 10:09 am
Location: Albia, IA

mine are using pieces of hay/straw only
dancingirl76
Scully
Posts: 2009
Joined: Mon Jan 26, 2004 5:35 pm
Location: Texas/San Antonio

Funny you should ask, I shot this pic just yesterday... dead live oak leaves, twigs... and plastic zip ties :lol:

Image

...and, just about 200 yards away in back of the school, also in a Bo 11...

grass clippings with a little mud laid on....

Image

Mostly, our martins will take whatever they can find on the ground around the nest site.

MIke Scully
pugsleyhall
Posts: 268
Joined: Tue Mar 09, 2010 4:28 pm
Location: Alabama/Grant

Mike,


Love the zip ties, so funny what birds use in their nests!


Melissa
Proud member of the PMCA
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2011-Quite a few visitors but none stayed
BigT
Posts: 101
Joined: Mon Nov 24, 2003 9:34 pm
Location: Grove City, Ohio

Primarily Straw here.
wbmiller3
Posts: 124
Joined: Tue May 22, 2007 2:23 pm
Location: Texas/Houston

Oak leaves and twigs are the favorite here, but one pair has built with only twigs, all about the same diameter, and all about five inches long. It looks like they ordered them from a supply house!
MB12RING
Posts: 87
Joined: Tue Apr 05, 2011 12:36 pm
Location: MI, Fruitport

The sy female at my house in MI goes down to the garden and picks up pieces of dead grasss and parts of last years dead cattails. Today there was a piece of cattail stalk about 12" long hanging off the porch. I don't know how she got it all the way up there but it got caught on the porch railing and they worked on it all morning until they dragged it through the hole!
The Walvoords
Posts: 55
Joined: Mon Jul 06, 2009 7:31 am
Location: Cleveland/Wisconsin

Mine like shredded corn stalks and peices of the corn roots. Pretty coarse stuff. Some make shelves of mud along with the other materials. When it comes time to bring in green leaves, most are preferring pear tree leaves, while some like Willow or pieces of Maple leaves. This year there has been some straw materials showing up which makes me very suspicious about HOSPs intruding. I try to keep a good eye out for that,long pieces of grass and feathers are a sure sign of HOSPs going in.

Anna
Joe Zorn

I have one female that visits the same gourd each year that strips out every piece of nesting material that I supply, and lays her eggs on the bare gourd floor.

This year one of my wooden house rooms is like that, and the gourd that is usually bare has a very dense nest. I guess someone got there before her and she moved to the wooden house.

And the nests are all different. Grass, straw, pine needles, even cedar bark in a couple. As John Miller said, I think that the mother finds a good stash of nest material and keeps returning to it as long as it lasts.
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