Swallows on a Mission
The Legend of the Swallows In his book Capistrano Nights, Father St. John O'Sullivan, Pastor of Mission San Juan Capistrano from 1910-33, tells how the swallows first came to call the Mission home. One day, while walking through town, Father O'Sullivan saw a shopkeeper, broomstick in hand. He was knocking down the cone-shaped mud swallow nests under the eaves of his shop. The birds were darting back and forth, shreiking over the destruction of their homes. "What in the world are you doing?" O'Sullivan asked. "Why, these dirty birds are a nuisance and I am getting rid of them!" the shopkeeper responded. "But where can they go?" "I don't know and I don't care," he replied, slashing away with his pole. "But they've no business here, destroying my property." O'Sullivan then said, "Come on swallows, I'll give you shelter. Come to the Mission. There's room enough there for all." The very next morning, Father O'Sullivan discovered the swallows busy building their nests outside Father Junipero Serra's Church. A Good Place for Cliff Swallows The Swallow celebration began centuries ago when Mission padres observed that the birds returned each year on or about St. Joseph's Day on the church calendar, March 19. Thousands of orange-tailed migrants fly in to reclaim their old nests in the ancient arches and walls of the Mission, and to raise their young in the valley. The swallows of San Juan Capistrano made the Mission and the city world famous. The Capistrano birds are Cliff Swallows, which have probably been returning to the area for centuries. They transferred their nests to the eaves of the Mission when it was built near two rivers. This was an ideal spot for swallows to nest and raise their young. Billions of insects necessary to their survival thrived in the open fields and wetlands near the riverbeds. And the swallows could get plenty of mud for building their nests. But today San Juan Capistrano is a growing city. The swallows have found more eaves to nest under, but their food supply is dwindling as humans take over the wetlands and riverbeds for businesses and homes. Now the swallows are nesting farther from the center of town, and visitors no longer see clouds of swallows descending on the Mission as they once did. Still, the swallows are Capistrano's most famous citizens. The birds are not only well known, but well loved and protected here. The city is by law a bird sanctuary. Every
year around the Day of San Juan (October 23), the famous cliff swallows
of San Juan Capistrano swirl into the sky and head back to their wintering
grounds in Argentina, 6,000 miles south. And they faithfully return every
spring in mid March. Will the tradition continue? You'll want to check
the news every March 19! Try
This!
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