- Joined
- Dec 15, 2021
I minced some blue berries that grow off a bush near me and hand fed it. Put it in a box with tissue paper.
Any tips?
Any tips?
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Its covered in OP's unmistakable stench now, basically unrecognizable.putting it back in the same spot and seeing if the parents return to continue feeding it could be an option.
It's kinda a myth that animal/bird parents will reject their young if it has the scent of a human on it. With birds they'll be making specific calls to locate each other, but you have to be kinda in tune with the calls of a particular species to identify the sounds. Putting the fledgeling back in the same area and backing off to see if the parents re-engage may well be worth a try, but only if the odds of the fledgeling being predated are slim to none. If you or your neighbours have cats, forget about it.Its covered in OP's unmistakable stench now, basically unrecognizable.
Yes. I used something like that mixed with water exclusively for feeding a fledgling sparrow i found, which i successfully "wildered out" after a couple of weeks. Also made an ass out of myself in front of the pet shop owner when i asked "But how will it learn to fly without its mother teaching it?" and he just gave me a long look before saying "They do learn that by themselves"Would those mixes you put in bird feeders work? maybe grind it into a paste and syringe it into their mouths
Nice! If you can observe from a good distance, checking that the parents have returned would be the last thing to do to ensure lil buddy is gonna make it. Unless there were other fledgelings in there too, in which case nothing else to do.Update. Found the nest where it fell from, it survived the night, and I put it back in the nest.View attachment 6086781
Is that not a bad thing? The mother bird will pick up your scent from the baby and kill/ignore it? Or am I thinking of sonething else? I know hamsters do that.Update. Found the nest where it fell from, it survived the night, and I put it back in the nest.View attachment 6086781
As @Cougar Pump said already, that's mostly a myth. Birds are not animals that rely on their sense of smell much, the common advice is to put them back into the nest right away if it is possible or wait and see if the mother bird is around before doing that. I only picked up my fella because he was sitting in the middle of a bike lane and it was just a matter of time before he got ran over. If OP lives a bit more rural and knows/can reach the nest his bird fell out of it was the best decision to just put it back, highest chance of making it if the mother bird is still around.The mother bird will pick up your scent from the baby and kill/ignore it