Ravens, rinse, repeat birds return to suburban street - Action News
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Ottawa

Ravens, rinse, repeat birds return to suburban street

When it comes to rooting out roosting ravens, never say "nevermore." So quoth the residents of a formerly quiet street in the Ottawa suburb of Orlanswhere the glossy black birds keep coming back despite efforts to evict them.

'Permanently territorial' birds make themselves at home despite eviction efforts

A nest of young ravens await the return of their parents at an Orleans home on Fountainhead drive this spring
Nestlings await the return of their parents under the protective eaves of a home on Fountainhead Drive in Orlans. (Submitted by Chelsey McLellan)

When it comes to rooting out roosting ravens, never say "nevermore."

So quoth the residents of a formerly quiet street in the east Ottawa suburb of Orlanswhere people havebecome captivated by a pair of the glossy black birds that have, for the third time in twoyears, chosen to nest not high up a pine tree or rocky cliff, but under the eaves of their homes.

Sam Dalbahfirst spottedthe corvid couple assembling sticks in a protected area under the eaves in his double-gabled house on Fountainhead Drive last spring.

Not wishing to play host to a family of large, croakingbirds, Dalbah removed the small collection of sticks before it could grow intoa nest.

Soon, however, the birds began rebuilding under the protection of the gabled roof overhangof Dalbah's neighbour'shomethree doorsdown.

There, Sadiq Zaman said his family endured the noisy nesting season, but shortly after removed the nest and cleaned the shingles that had been severely soiled by the ravens and their brood.

Zaman showedCBCa video shotlast May ofthe juvenile ravens tapping on the window of a bedroom below their nest.

Last year, juvenile ravens lingered even after leaving the nest built in in Sadiq Zaman's home
A juvenile raven is seen rapping on an upstairs window of Sadiq Zaman's home last spring. (Sadiq Zaman)

To prevent theirreturn the following nesting season, the family installed anti-bird wireof the kind normallyusedto prevent pigeons from roosting on downtown monuments.

This spring, the ravens adaptedby hopping a few doors downto ahouse of the identical design the Dalbah residence.

Ravens 'permanently territorial'

Kevin McGowan ofCornell University's Lab ofOrnithology said ravens are "permanently territorial" and tend to mate for life, soit's highly likely this is the same pair returning to roost each spring.

"It's exciting," McGowan said. "We think of them as wilderness birds ... [but]they're changing their behaviour in response to our behaviour."

They're also creatures of opportunity, McGowan said.

"We waste a lot of food ...and throw a lot of stuff out, and the ravens and the crows are ready to take advantage of that right away."

Sam Dalbah stands outside his Orleans home a few days after removing an empty raven's nest
Sam Dalbah stands outside his home a few days after removing an empty and abandoned nest. (Stu Mills/CBC)

'If I'm chosen, I'm chosen'

Dalbah, a public servant, was in Uganda for work when a neighbour texted to warn that the ravens had returned.

By the time heflew home, Dalbahrealized it wastoo late to evict the recently hatched fledglings from their nest.

"I would hate someone to come and interrupt my family," he explained.

As with Zaman's home a year earlier, Dalbah's roof shingles now look like they've been liberally paintedin brown and white. But he's now resigned to live with the mess.

"I'll let it be. If I'm chosen, I'm chosen," he reasoned.

By the time the chicks finally took flight one recent Saturday, the busy, boisterousnest had become a local attraction. Dalbaheven jokedhe considered sellingtickets to the spectacle.

Instead, he's hired a cleaning contractor to wash the droppings from his roof.

Ravens built a large, messy nest in two homes on Fountainhead drive
The ravens have now built their large, messy nest under the eaves of two homes on Fountainhead Drive. (Submitted by Chelsey McLellan)

Learning from each other

Across the street, neighbour Sandra Webber said she moved into the Spring Valley Trails subdivision on the edge of the Mer Bleu Bog in 2019.

"[Homebuilder] Claridgetold me this was a bird sanctuary and it would be a very pleasant place to live as a result," she recalled, though she admittedshe wasn't picturing ravensduring the sales pitch.

"I'm fascinated by it," said Ted Cheskey, naturalist director with Ottawa-based environmental organization Nature Canada. "We're talking about one of the smartest creatures on Earth."

Cheskey said ravens, once vilified as a nuisance birdand hunted nearly to extinction, are now protected by provincial wildlife laws.

In his view, the ravens' repeated return to Fountainhead Driveis best interpreted as a sign of theirevolvingrelationship with us and ours with them.

"I think you can learn a lot by having a raven as a neighbour for a little while," Cheskey said.