How to Identify Wild Bird Eggs
By eHow Hobbies, Games & Toys Editor
Instructions
Step 1:
Locate red cardinal nests in dense thickets a few feet off the ground. They generally lay 3 to 4 eggs between March and August. The eggs are white or pale green with brown or gray speckles.Step 2:
Look closely at a horizontal branch of a shade tree high off the ground. The walnut-sized may belong to the ruby throated hummingbird. The bean-sized eggs are generally found in pairs and are a plain white.Step 3:
Find a nest containing 7 to 8 pink eggs with reddish-brown spots and you may be looking at the eggs of a wild spruce grouse. If the eggs are olive with reddish-brown spots, they belong to a sage grouse.Step 4:
Take note of cup-shaped nests constructed from mud and grass. If they're filled with 3 to 5 smooth, glossy bright blue eggs, you've found wild robin eggs.Step 5:
Climb up into conifer trees and look for cup-shaped nests 20 feet or so off the ground. If you find bluish eggs with brown spots concentrated at the large end, you're looking at blue jay eggs.
Tips & Warnings
- If you find whole eggs or a birds nest, take pictures and observe it without touching it. In many areas, it's illegal to disturb the nests of wild birds.
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