X2Keep us posted! Would like to know if what you do works!
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X2Keep us posted! Would like to know if what you do works!
I will get a photo once I return home! I believe that the problem was in fact due to a predator, and these are robin chicks. They resemble their parents and robins have been nesting in this area since I have lived here (4 years). The spot isn't very vulnerable. I will try to put the nest into a container, but Mom robin and Dad robin are very protective of their little ones. I wasn't in a hedge or foliage of any kind, it is on the electrical boxes on the side of my home. Thank you!If the nest was big enough for the mother to incubate the eggs in then it is big enough for the chicks. My guess would be that they are being targeted by a predator and that is why the parents were squawking, probably a crow or jackdaw. It will likely have been at the nest and dropped the chicks trying to get them away and may have partially collapsed the nest in the process if it really appears too small.... only you will know. Or they could be cuckoo chicks that have been laid into a robin's nest and are too large for it. How does the chick size compare to the adult robin? If they are unfeathered then they would not be much bigger than a robin's egg and should be fine in the nest.
Is there cover from predators above the nest or is it in a vulnerable spot? Can you post a photo? Is it in a hedge or scrub that has been cut back recently? Can you put the nest inside a container with drainage holes and return it to the same location and provide some additional foliage cover to protect from predators if that may be the problem.
Will keep you all posted, then! Just check back on this thread, or I may just post onto my account page!Keep us posted! Would like to know if what you do works!
Thank you, and alrighty!If you post here, those of us who have contributed to the thread will get an alert and see it, whereas if you post on your account page, we may never see it.
Good luck
Touching birds and parents abandoning them is an urban myth. I have a plan already, but thank you anyways.I suggest moving them to a safe spot somewhere with other robins. Since you touched them, the parents may have abandoned them. Maybe set up some food for them if the parents aren't there to feed them