RED-WINGS AND CATTAILS
Red-winged blackbirds and cattails go together like peas and carrots and peanut butter and jelly. Red-wings mostly nest in cattail marshes, large and small, and also among tall grasses and ten-foot-tall phragmites. Red-wings are striking birds. Males are jet-black with red shoulder patches. Black is an intimidating non-color that repulses other male red-wings from each other's nesting area. And black helps chase away crows, hawks, mink, house cats and other kinds of predators that might consume young red-wings. The red epaulets are displayed when the wings are raised as visual threats to other male red-wings when each male sways on top of a tall, wind-blown plant and repeatedly sings "kon-ga-reeeee" to establish his "ownership" of a patch of cattails or reeds". Male red-wings also regularly dive-bomb and swoop ferociously at predators to scare them away from their mates' nurseries, and the young sheltering in th...