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on their own. Our barn swallows hatch two or three families every summer so you've got to evict them between families.
They are great birds to watch (aside from the poop.) I've learned from my own reading that they are altricial, meaning adult relatives other than parents sometimes help raise the young. Babies from early in the season will help with later litters, meaning as many as seven or eight swallows swooping around the nest. They also return to nest in the same spot year after year. At some point, when the parents die, or retire to Florida, offspring reared in a particular location will nest in their site, often in the very same nest, just patching it up every year.
We've had barn swallows in the same corner of our carport since 1975. The old nest has been used almost exclusively, though a couple of times in recent years two new nests were built. Next month, we're enclosing the carport as a new room and I don't know where they will go but I hope we can shift them over to another location, like under the eaves -- preferably under the eaves of the toolshed where the poop problem won't be so bad! We do hate it when they poop on our cars, especially now that we have one that's navy blue and one that's black.
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