Getting pushy in a puddle
This is the story of two American robins not very successfully sharing one road puddle for bathing.
I observed this down by the front street from my condo, and the sun was just up over the buildings in the east. I heard a lot of robin activity out front of my place while I was busy doing household chores, and went to the front door to check it out. During the Nature Conservancy of Canada’s Big Backyard BioBlitz week, I was particularly aware of bird noises near the house. So, I was on alert for interesting critter happenings around me.
I had made the choice to do my bioblitz in a walking circle around my house (about one kilometre radius, as the crow flies) to reflect my local and more literal “backyard.” I used my pocket camera (versus a camera that one can add on a lens to), as more of my neighbours could do this sort of exercise using a cell phone or small (pocket) camera.
The pictures are not as clear as they might be under other circumstances, but the puddle was a distance away in the deep shade, and these two were continuously moving as they jostled for puddle position.
Watch the puddle pushover unfold in the slideshow below:
In the end, the interloper robin that is being pushed out of the puddle just hopped off to a nearby lawn, and the remaining bird stood and looked around, finished a bit of a bath (seemed a bit distracted) and then went off to do its bird business.