I am not a deer hunter, but when I went out to prune our little honeycrisp apple tree, I discovered that the deer had already done it for me. At that moment, I have to admit I wished all the deer hunters a very good season next year. And what does that have to do with birds? Well, there is a bird that has just returned to our part of the state that expresses my momentary thoughts in its call and the name we have given it. Do you know which bird I mean? Yes, it’s the killdeer.
The birds make this call (described as killdee or killdeah) during territorial disputes, when a male is courting a female, and when they are alarmed by an intruder. Killdeer belong to the family of shorebirds; plovers in particular. But unlike all the other plovers these birds prefer to live inland in fields and on farmlands often miles from the nearest water.

Killdeer, like all the other plovers builds it nest on the ground, although build may be too generous a word, since it generally consists of a 

Truly precocious, killdeer chicks are up and running around as soon as their feather’ s dry after hatching.
Once the eggs hatch (around 24 days), the chicks are up and running as soon as their feathers dry. They’re about as cute as any baby bird could be, looking like brown fluff balls running on toothpicks. The parents lead them away from the nest site to feed as a family.
I discovered a few killdeer nests over the years, but it takes patience and luck. The most unusual one was built on top of a Dairy Queen at the Minnesota Zoo. I was working as a Monorail Tour guide at the time and on each of our trips we would slow down as we passed over the roof and look down to see the adult birds taking turns on the nest, sometimes standing directly over it on hot days. The roof was covered with gravel, which was a perfect medium for them and it was well protected from predators, but we wondered how those babies were going to leave the premises when their parent said it was time to go. Nesting on roof tops is not unusual for these birds, although they have lost many of those options as people have moved away from gravel and gone to a solid surface roofing material.
In the next few weeks, as the spring chorus grows in volume keep your ears tuned for Charadrius vociferous, a bird well named in either Greek or English.
By Kate Crowley
Photos by Mike Link

