New life in progress.

And they are not shy to play the game in public:)
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So, what do you think was going on here?

Early in the season and there was nesting going on all around us. Soon some babies will be born here, and then we will have to keep the sparrows away as they hunt the dwarf geckos for their tails, and even worse the smaller ones' lives. The sparrows feed the gecko tails to their newborn babies. Of course, we were not happy about this when we saw it for the first time, but a mystery was cleared up for us, as we saw many little geckos running around with no tails.

So, as soon as we hear the sparrows arriving in the front garden, either my wife or I run outside to scare them away. A good thing is that our back garden is more secure and that results in the dwarf geckos' population growing. Most mornings the geckos are all over the show feeding on small insects. A mosquito stands no chance against a small gecko. Note that they are called dwarf geckos as they are not as big as the regular geckos, and they are only found here in the Cape.

Nope, they are not wrestling, but rather having a good time.
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Check how he holds the female's abdomen with his front foot.
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This little guy sat on a pot below watching the spectacle.
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As he looked away, you can see on his face that he was not impressed with what he saw. Almost a shy look:)
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And there is the pot that is below the love pot above.
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At least, the Cape Sparrows are more discrete.

The male arrived with the linen for the bed in their nest.
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He was just too fast for me to get a full shot of his flight, as his proud wife looked on.
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The Cape Sparrows both build their nest, and it is always a rather untidy looking one. The neighbor next door to us has a grape vine canopy, and the sparrows are busy building their nest in there. I will have to ask the neighbor for permission to search the vine and to remove the nest so that they can go and nest somewhere else. Where they are building their nest now is too close to our front garden, and they will happily hunt the small geckos when their babies are born.
This is not cruel, as we know that they will go and build their nest elsewhere.
Such is life.

I hope you enjoyed the pictures and the story.

Photos by Zac Smith. All-Rights-Reserved.

Camera: Canon PowershotSX70HS Bridge camera.

Thank you kindly for supporting this post.



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13 comments
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it does look indeed like spring has already started on your end of the globe :)

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Hahaha! These geckos, I remember seeing two flies months ago exactly in that position 😆😂.

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There are lots of fauna and flora that have Cape in the name but are found all over South Africa and I have a lot of those little geckos at my place. They are also hunted by Rain spiders and my cats make sure that the sparrows keep their distance but hunt the geckos for fun instead.
The little dwarf geckos are oddities in that they are diurnal instead of nocturnal and they also don't hibernate in winter.

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(Edited)

I just go according to the official names, and maybe it was given because the dwarf geckos first landed in the Cape. We also have rain spiders here that catch them, but the sparrows remain our main headaches. I recently also got a Cape Dwarf Chameleon on camera that I will post some time.
Oh. I forget. The adult dwarf geckos eat the baby rain spiders, and so it's the survival of the fittest.

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Hahahaha! He does seem like he was caught red handed! hehehehe.

We have a lot of geckos in our garden and with a pet tarantula, there s an ecosystem that has developed. The geckos eat mosquitos (FREAKING YAY) and the tarantula eats the cockroaches we find wafting around this time of year - which I am terrified of (even the small ones). The enemy of my enemy is my friend. It took me a while, but the tarantula stopped bothering me when I realized what his favourite dish was.

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