Titmouse

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The rich titmouse often called the common tern is a bird not much smaller than a sparrow. The length of our bird body is between 13 and 16 cm. The rich titmouse has a black head with a white spot on the cheek. The body is yellow-green or yellow. A black tie runs through the center of the stomach. The tail and wings are blue. A male from a female can be distinguished by a longer and wider tie in favor of a male.

We encounter ordinary sikkus throughout Europe excluding north. We can also meet her in temperate regions of Asia or North-West Africa.

Life.

The breeding period for our songbird falls in March and April. Then the couples start looking for places to nest. The great tit is not a demanding bird when it comes to gniado. They can easily make themselves live from a nesting box from a hollow or from building gaps. The female lays 4 to 16 eggs in one hatch. After about 14 days the hatchlings are hatching. Chicks after hatching quickly become independent, and after three weeks they leave the nest. During these three weeks, male and female are fed by young birds.

Food

Titmouse can eat as much as she weighs during the day. In the spring and in the summer season, her food is insects, larvae or eggs. In autumn or winter, the titmouse eagerly visits the feeders by eating, for example, sunflower seeds.

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