Q: A mallard duck is sitting on eggs on our second-floor deck, with no access to the ground. Is there something we can do to protect the duck and ducklings?
A: This turns out to be not as big a problem as it might seem. If there is grass or ground below your deck, the ducklings will be just fine making the jump. Little ducks have been called “ping pong balls covered in fluff,” because they have good bounce-ability. They’ll need to dry off after hatching, so may not make the jump for up to 24 hours. If there is concrete or stones below your deck, call the Wildlife Rehabilitation Center, 651-486-9453, for advice. The Minnesota DNR says not to offer water or food to the ducklings, since this might delay their leaving.

Oriole food
Q: I love hearing Baltimore orioles sing in early spring. But there doesn’t seem to be anything for them to eat out in nature, so how do they survive their first few weeks up here?
A: Good question, and I’ll bet these beautiful birds have to work hard to keep themselves fed after arriving back from the tropics. Their usual diet includes many kinds of insects, even hairy caterpillars that repulse other birds, plus wild fruits and berries, snails and flower nectar. Some orioles drink flower nectar the way hummingbirds do, dipping into the flower from the top. At other times orioles become “flower piercers,” stabbing a bloom at its base to drink its nectar. Food scarcity sends orioles to feeders that offer grape jelly (or many other kinds of fruit jellies), oranges and sugar water in feeders.
Rain worms
Q: Why don’t I ever see birds, especially robins, eating the dead worms on the pavement after a rain?
A: You make a good point, I’ve never seen birds snatching up those free worm meals on the sidewalk, either. Robins do eat some, but there usually are too many worms at one time for the local robins to keep up. Robins are much more familiar with catching their own live earthworms, after watching for small movements in the soil or lawn, so some may not recognize lifeless worms as food.

ETA for 2 species
Q: I can never remember when our hummingbirds and wrens are due to arrive — can you help?
A: By this time, both ruby-throated hummingbirds and house wrens have been here for a while. Maybe make a note on next year’s calendar: Hummingbirds zip in from late April to early June, with a peak in mid-May, and wrens are on a similar schedule, late April to late May, with a peak in mid-May.