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Baby Bird Nestlings

Baby bird nestlings always comes out of an egg. And beautiful as these eggs are, they are most remarkable when you think that each one holds a tiny bird.

Eggs are not all alike, of course. One the size of a bean is large enough to hold a hummingbird baby, till it is old enough to come out. But the young ostrich needs a shell nearly as big as your head. So there are all sizes of eggs to fit the different sizes of birds.

If you should break an egg freshly laid, you would not see a bird, for it would not be formed at that time.

After the egg is laid in its soft bed, it has to be kept warm for many days, and that is why the mother bird sits on her nest so quietly.

She is keeping the eggs warm, so that the little ones will form and grow, until they are as big as the shells can hold.

While the mother is sitting her mate does all he can to help, though each species has its own way of doing things.

  • The blue jay brings food to his mate, so that she need not leave the nest at all, and many others do so also.

  • But the kingbird father simply watches the nest to protect it while the mother goes for food.

  • A redstart gets into the nest himself, to keep the eggs warm while his mate is gone.

  • A goldfinch coaxes his mate to go out with him for a lunch, leaving nest and eggs to take care of themselves.


While the mother bird is roosting on the nest, the father bird is singing. This is the time when we hear so much bird song. The singers have little to do but to wait, and so they please themselves, and their mates, and us too, by singing a great deal.

When the little birds begin to be cramped, and find their cradle too tight, they peck at the shell with a sort of tooth that grows on the end of the beak, and is called the "egg tooth."

This soon breaks the shell, and the baby bird nestlings come out. Then the mother or father carefully picks up the pieces of shell, carries them off, and throws them away, leaving only the baby bird nestlings in the nest.

baby gull nestlings
When the birdlings break out of their shells they do not all look the same. Ducks, geese, gulls, quails, and other baby bird nestlings who live on the ground, as well as hawks and owls, are dressed in pretty suits of down.

They have their eyes open, and the ground birds are ready to run about at once.

But most birds hatched in nests in trees and bushes, like robins and bluebirds, are very different. When they come out of their shells they are naked, have their eyes shut, and look as if they were nearly all mouth.

A baby hummingbird nestling looks about as big as a honey bee, and a robin baby not much bigger than the eggshell he came out of.

They lie flat down in the nest, seeming to be asleep most of the time. All they want is to be warm and to be fed.

To keep them warm, the mother sits on them a great part of the time, and for the first few days o£ their lives, the father often brings most of the food. Sometimes he gives it to the mother, and she feeds the little ones. But sometimes she gets off the nest, and flies away to rest, and get something to eat for herself, while he feeds the nestlings.

There is one bird father who — it is thought - never comes to the nest, either to watch the eggs or to help feed the nestlings. That is our ruby-throated hummingbird.

We do not know the reason for this. It may be that he thinks his shining ruby would show the hiding-place of the nest, or it may be that the little mother is not willing to have any help.

Young birds grow very fast, and soon feathers begin to come out all over them. They are not very pretty at this time. Baby Bird Lessons
Bird Nests
Feeding Wild Baby Birds

Return from Baby bird nestlings to A Home For Wild Birds Home



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