Q: When a flock of Canada geese flies in to our local lake, it looks like they start fighting as they drop toward the water. What’s that all about?
A: A flock of Canada geese does look fairly disorganized as the birds come in to land but this isn’t aggressive behavior. Instead, in order to land quickly without having to go on a long glide, the geese are rotating their bodies, twisting and turning to spill the air pressure under the wings that’s kept them in the air. Some geese even do a full barrel roll to help slow themselves down and allow for a quick drop. These tactics are called whiffling, and if geese and mallards and other waterbirds didn’t do this, they’d need to soar great lengths before they could slowly glide in.

More cardinals, please
Q: I love seeing cardinals against the snow. How can I attract more of them to my feeders?
A: Cardinals aren’t hard to please. They’re big fans of black oil sunflower seeds and safflower seeds, too. They have fairly big feet, so they don’t like to have to grip a perch to dine, and most suet feeders don’t suit their large beaks. Instead, they prefer to visit hopper, tray and domed-saucer type feeders, where they can stand easily. Add in some peanut bits and small balls of suet, and the neighborhood cardinals will drop in morning and evening. They also feed on the ground, either picking up dropped bits under feeders or seeking out millet scattered for sparrows. Cardinals relish having access to water year round, so a birdbath heater is a good idea in winter.

Where do birds sleep?
Q: Watching the late afternoon rush at my feeders, I’m wondering where the birds go to sleep away the winter nights — do they use their old nests?
A: The birds you see in your backyard are spending the night not far away. I’ve seen cardinals grab a last seed, then fly into a stand of evergreens about 50 feet away, where they’ll perch on a sheltered branch for the night. House sparrows huddle up in a shrub or small tree, goldfinches perch near a tree trunk at night, and chickadees adopt a cavity — a hole in a tree, a break in a stone wall — for nightly naps. If birds build their nests in cavities (like chickadees, bluebirds, woodpeckers) then they’ll sleep in cavities, too. But it’s almost unheard of for birds to use last summer’s nest as a night refuge.

Noisy robins, mystery food
Q: I saw a flock of robins in a deciduous tree in my neighborhood recently and they were making a lot of noise as they were busy eating something. Do you know what kind of tree it was and what they were eating?
A: The photo you sent shows a hackberry tree, one of my favorite native trees in forests, parks and backyards. The berries of hackberry trees ripen in the fall and are prized by many bird species, especially robins, providing meals at a time when most other food sources are disappearing. And birds are the prime way that this tree’s seeds get dispersed, notes Welby R. Smith in his “Trees and Shrubs of Minnesota.” The hackberry’s warty, bumpy bark is very distinctive, and makes this tree easy to recognize, even in winter (see it here: https://extension.umn.edu/trees-and-shrubs/common-hackberry). Robins are big fans of fruit, too, especially in winter.