
June 7, 2026
More details ↓
Bank swallows are at peak nesting season in early summer, actively provisioning young in colonies along Milwaukee's waterways while aquatic insects emerge—the primary food source that sustains their breeding cycle.
The Milwaukee River carries the sound of water over stone, but if you listen closely near the Historic Financial District, you'll hear something else threading through the air above. Sharp chips and chatters mark the flight paths of bank swallows as they work the space between water and sky. These smallest of our swallows have claimed the vertical banks along the waterway, where their tunnel nests honeycomb the exposed earth like a apartment complex built for speed.
Bank swallows are brown above and white below, with a distinct brown band across the chest that separates them from other swallows in flight. They fly with quick wingbeats and sudden turns, following insects invisible to us but abundant in the warm air of early summer. Right now, in the longest days of the year, they are feeding young hidden deep in those tunnels. Each pair excavates a burrow that can extend three feet into the riverbank, ending in a chamber lined with grass and feathers where four or five white eggs become hungry mouths that demand constant attention.
The timing is not accidental. Early summer brings the great emergence of aquatic insects from the Milwaukee River. Mayflies, caddisflies, and midges complete their underwater development and rise to the surface by the millions. They shed their nymphal skins and take to the air just as the swallows need them most. A single bank swallow chick requires hundreds of insects each day, and the parents make trip after trip from river to nest, their throats bulging with captured prey. The insects emerge in waves throughout the day, but the heaviest flights often come at dusk when the air cools and the water releases its stored warmth. You might see the swallows working these emergences, dozens of birds wheeling and diving in coordinated hunting flights that can stretch for half a mile along the river.
The colony nests in loose synchrony, most pairs laying eggs within a few weeks of each other. This timing ensures that the peak feeding demands of all those growing chicks align with the peak abundance of emerging insects. The swallows have only one chance each year to raise their young here before they begin their long migration to South America. They cannot afford to miss the emergence. When the insects rise, the swallows are ready. When the emergence wanes in late summer, the birds will follow the retreating abundance south, leaving behind empty tunnels that will collapse with the first hard rains of fall.
Listen now for their voices above the water. The calls are sharp and social, birds communicating the location of insect concentrations to others in the colony. If you're standing where you can see the river, watch for their flight pattern: quick bursts of wingbeats followed by brief glides, sudden direction changes that track the movement of prey too small for you to see. The air itself tells the story of abundance in early summer, written in the language of wings and hunger, emergence and provision. The swallows read it fluently, and their success is measured in the steady stream of insects disappearing into tunnel mouths carved into the living bank.