THE BIRD THREAD - Post birds, discuss birds or even sniff birds.

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

How much do you love birds?


  • Total voters
    932
I fucking love Australian magpies, the way they patrol and defend their little patches of grass every day without fail always cheers me up. I want to befriend the nearby ones but they don't seem too interested sadly. I try to buy their friendship with food, but the food attracts the pigeons, and they HATE pigeons.

Sometimes when I want to feed pigeons I give an offering of food to the magpies first so they leave the pigeons alone. It usually works lol.
I love them too. This Australian lady on instagram posts videos with magpies hopping on and walking all over her all the time. Don’t know how she gets them this tame.


Anyway I love their vocals. Her instagram is @kyeswimm108
 
I fucking love Australian magpies, the way they patrol and defend their little patches of grass every day without fail always cheers me up. I want to befriend the nearby ones but they don't seem too interested sadly. I try to buy their friendship with food, but the food attracts the pigeons, and they HATE pigeons.

Sometimes when I want to feed pigeons I give an offering of food to the magpies first so they leave the pigeons alone. It usually works lol.
What kind of food do you offer? I'm not an expert with this, but I've had some decent luck if you stick to pure meat (ie. Little bits of mince). Other birds like pigeons aren't as interested in pure meat, so you basically only attract magpies, crows, currawongs or kookaburras.
 
A dove (most likely a mourning dove) has made a nest right outside where I live IRL. 😎
Had a bit of a scare recently. Saw a little bird on the ground near that nest, thought baby passed away. But the baby opened eyes, so I washed my hands, and lifted baby into the nest. The mother jolted in fear, but didn't fly away. Since then I haven't seen the baby on the ground again, so hopefully the baby is alright. Already has feathers BTW.

(figured the baby had accidentally fallen out of the nest and there was nothing the mother could do)
 
Had a bit of a scare recently. Saw a little bird on the ground near that nest, thought baby passed away. But the baby opened eyes, so I washed my hands, and lifted baby into the nest. The mother jolted in fear, but didn't fly away. Since then I haven't seen the baby on the ground again, so hopefully the baby is alright. Already has feathers BTW.

(figured the baby had accidentally fallen out of the nest and there was nothing the mother could do)
It's fledging! :biggrin: Most birds leave the nest before they know how to fly. As long as it's uninjured and away from immediate danger (roads, pets) it's doing exactly what it needs to do. You must have created a nice space where the family feels safe to raise their babies.
 
Last edited:
You must have created a nice space where the family feels safe to raise their babies.
The nest is near the front door that I often go in and out of, so the mother dove must've observed that and built a nest there anyway.
 
The nest is near the front door that I often go in and out of, so the mother dove must've observed that and built a nest there anyway.
Doves are known for making nests in risky/strange places, but I like to think they could sense you are a good person.
 
(figured the baby had accidentally fallen out of the nest and there was nothing the mother could do)
Happened again ... Different baby this time, with less feathers. Seemed alive though, so put back in nest. The mother was scared off this time, but later came back. Was able to find out there's 2 babies in the nest. Hopefully it doesn't happen too often. Looks like I'm going to have to check on the nest area every so often now. Normal for doves?
 
It sounds like they are ready to leave the nest and explore the big world.
I dunno. They barely move. Especially the smaller one. Also the smaller one was on the ground again, still alive but barely moving.
 
Yesterday I cleaned the windows. When I sat down in the living room to watch some TV, I hear a loud ass thud, I turn around and there is this vaguely pigeon shaped smudge on one of the windows.
First thought: is the pigeon fine (it was)
Second thought: now I have to clean it again (I did)
 
I dunno. They barely move. Especially the smaller one. Also the smaller one was on the ground again, still alive but barely moving.
That's pretty normal for fledgelings. Their instinct is to freeze where they are and wait for the parents to bring them food, for the most part. Wildlife rehabs call spring "kidnapping season" because so many people bring in fledglings they find that were perfectly fine. Good intentions, but misguided.

Yesterday I cleaned the windows. When I sat down in the living room to watch some TV, I hear a loud ass thud, I turn around and there is this vaguely pigeon shaped smudge on one of the windows.
First thought: is the pigeon fine (it was)
Second thought: now I have to clean it again (I did)
If it's a common occurrence, you can put UV-reflective stickers on the window to help birds see it. Doves began hitting the french doors near my back feeder whenever they would get spooked by hawks, and stickers stopped it completely.
1749154606306.webp
 
Last edited:
That's pretty normal for fledgelings. Their instinct is to freeze where they are and wait for the parents to bring them food, for the most part.
Hopefully the repeated falls onto hard ground (from about 2 to 3 m or 7 to 9') hasn't messed them up. Set out some patio chairs by the nest site to cushion any future falls.
 
Last edited:
Hopefully the repeated falls onto hard ground (from about 2 to 3 m or 7 to 9') hasn't messed them up. Set out some patio chairs by the nest site to cushion any future falls.
update: Looks like one of them may not have made it (the one with less feathers). The other one seems OK though.
 
How to befriend a crow


This would probably work with magpies too. Key seems to be finding where they hang out and showing up consistently at the same time every day.
 
update: Looks like one of them may not have made it (the one with less feathers). The other one seems OK though.
update again: The baby that is still around is looking more like an adult dove now. And the mom now stays at the nest less these days.

edits to add: The other baby bird definitely didn't make it, unfortunately. Mombird ejected the body from the nest area earlier today.
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom