a battle of wits
June 16, 2009
Sure, he looks innocent here, but he’s merely taking a deep, cleansing breath before inhaling most of the food.
After he and his male peers finished flinging food around, I decided to take another approach. The towhees are the largest birds to come to the feeding table. Part of their food strategy is to scratch around, and I’ve tried to modify this behavior through the judicious use of a cowbell-like noisemaker.
This is a bird that jumps in fear when a big morsel of food (that it has just gotten and dropped) rolls on the table a bit. I thought maybe if I applied a loud noise when it started flinging, it would learn that this was inappropriate behavior. Silly me.
It took a couple of days. Soon, the towhee only turned around slightly when it heard the noise. Cornmeal flew everywhere.
Today, guess who was the first to line up at dawn. (I bring the food indoors at night.) But this time, I moved the cornmeal dish slightly under a flowering plant on the table. The smaller birds could reach the food easily. The towhee could too, but flinging would require some acrobatic maneuvering.
By late afternoon, it had figured things out. Tomorrow is another day.
