The mourning doves began nesting in a planter on Marilyn McGonagle's apartment balcony about a week after her sister Kathy died.
Before that, there had been no doves, no birds of any species, on or near the second-floor balcony in St. Louis Park. McGonagle doesn't feed birds, and hadn't considered herself a birder in any way.
The doves built a neat round nest of flexible twigs to hold the two eggs they then laid. The eggs hatched, the juvenile doves grew and fledged. The adults promptly produced two more eggs in the same nest. Those hatched on Aug. 4.
Multiple clutches are not uncommon for mourning doves. They usually build nests in trees, sometimes on the ground, rarely in what dove researchers term "human-made substrates," like a planter.
The timing and placement of the nest has to give brief pause, however. An unusual coincidence? Perhaps.
"A friend mentioned that Kathy's spirit may be making a visit. I scoffed initially," McGonagle said, "but eventually found peace with the idea …
" … especially when I realized they were mourning doves."
The birds are named for what is described as a mournful, crooning vocalization (American Ornithologists' Union, Bulletin 117).