Question 2: What direction do swallows fly from to what direction every fall to spend the winter? The swallow is a migratory bird.
In the fall before winter, they always make their annual long-distance trip - flying in groups from the north to the far south to enjoy the warmth of the sun and the wet weather, and attacking the frost and cold winds of winter to leave the tits, grouse, and thunderbirds that never fly south for the winter.
On the surface, it seems that the cold winter in the north makes the swallows leave their homes to go to the south to spend the winter, and then return to their hometowns by the south to have children and live happily when the flowers bloom in the spring. Is this really the case? Not really. It turns out that swallows feed on insects, and they have never been accustomed to feeding on flying insects in the air, but are not good at searching for insect food in the cracks and gaps in the ground, nor can they eat berries as omnivorous as grouse and thunderbirds. They can't eat seeds and switch to leaves in winter (coniferous species don't lose their leaves even in winter). However, there are no flying insects for swallows to feed on in the winter in the north, and swallows can't go hairy like woodpeckers and whirlybirds.
Question 3: Why do swallows fly to the south in winter to spend the winter?
Question 4: How do crows, orioles, and swallows spend their winters? They hide in warm nests
Question 5: Where do swallows spend their winters, and where do they spend their summers?
The swallow is a typical migratory bird. After the end of breeding, the young birds still follow the adults and gradually form large flocks to migrate southward for the winter before the first cold wave arrives.
Moreover, there are no flying insects for swallows to feed on in the winter in the north, and swallows can't discover the larvae, pupae and eggs of the insects lurking there like woodpeckers and woodchucks. The lack of food compels swallows to migrate from north to south once a year in the fall and spring in order to get a wider living space. The swallows have become the "nomads" of the bird family.
And because the temperature in the south is too high in the summer, they must migrate north in the spring.
Question 6: Where do swallows fly to the south in winter? The south you are referring to is not really the south, but the south of China south of the Yangtze River. In fact, swallows will be supplied to the tropical areas south of the Tropic of Cancer in the winter, and most of China is north of the Tropic of Cancer, so you can't see the swallows. Some people in Jiangnan don't know how to think that swallows don't fly to the north if they are not in the south of China, I am from Guangdong in the south of China, but I don't see any swallows every year after the fall equinox, I think they are flying to the equator and Southeast Asia, besides, Southeast Asia is also the place where the bird's nests are abundant, and I can't see the swallows' return until the spring equinox of the next year. So, it is not flying to the south of China, but to the tropical areas south of the Tropic of Cancer.
Question 7: How do I know where the swallows go in the winter? Swallows like to live in warm places, so if you live in the north, you will find that there are fewer swallows in winter, and more in spring, and generally the swallows migrate to the south before the winter comes
Question 8: Where do the swallows fly from where they spend the winter every year. The swallow's hometown is in the north, and the color of the north is Xuan, so it was called Xuan bird in ancient times. The Chinese character "燕" refers specifically to the house swallow. Swallows usually breed from April to July. House swallows make their nests under the eaves of farm houses. Their food is insects. Swallows are typical migratory birds. After the end of breeding, the young birds still follow the adults and gradually form large flocks to migrate southward for the winter before the first cold wave arrives.