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BPAL Madness!
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Birdy-Birdy and Karma

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valentina

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There's a still-smallish pine tree in my back yard (probably 6 or 7 feet high) that has a cardinal nest in it. The nest is tucked in a bit, but is right at eye level. Mrs. Cardinal was faithfully sitting on the eggs, and would hold still if you approached quietly to look at her. Yesterday the eggs began hatching, and now there are four baby cardinals, making their tiny tweepy noises, little heads thrown back and beaks open wide. They are so cute. Both Mr. and Mrs. Cardinal are feeding and guarding.

 

About 5 or 6 years ago, a fledgling cardinal, really a pretty tiny little thing, was flapping around in the back yard. The parents were frantically accompanying it, trying to get it to fly again. It was almost 100 degrees, and the poor little thing was exhausted and stressed. All the wild bird experts say to leave the bird alone if this is going on, so I just watched it. But then I noticed a neighbor's cat rambling around and that was it -- I went out and picked up the little bird. I brought it inside, put it in an old finch cage and fed it watered-down canned dog food all evening. I got up in the morning and fed it. I came home at noon and fed it, and by this time, it was just opening its beak and crying for me to feed it when it would lay eyes on me. It would fall asleep in my hand after it ate. Too precious for words.

 

At that time, I had an Airedale Terrier named Karma. Karma was most interested in Birdy-Birdy (as I called him), and I let her sit in the room when I was feeding the little guy. She wasn't being mean, just curious -- she was used to my pet cockatiel and didn't consider birds to be food. When I came home at noon, Karma was sitting outside the closed door of the room where Birdy-Birdy was staying. It was a much nicer day, and the wildlife rescue folks had told me to put the little guy out and see if he'd fly again. So I did, and as it turns out, his parents had been hanging around waiting for him. I put him out and they were there right away. He fluttered away and I hoped like crazy that he made it to saftey.

 

But here's the strange thing -- later that summer, a male cardinal would frequently come sit on the fence and Karma would sit and look up at it as it gave her a sweet, chirpy tweep. She wasn't watching it aggressively, it was like she was just listening to it. She never acted that way with other wild birds -- she just ignored them. But this bird and Karma were talking to each other. I always wondered just what that was all about. I like to believe that it was Birdy-Birdy, back for a visit.

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That's so sweet! I love all my outside creatures, but I have yet to actually rescue any baby creatures. The other day a guinea fowl flew into our yard. I thought I was hallucinating or having an aneurysm or something when I looked out the window and saw an enormous grey bird on the neighbors' garage roof. It flew down into the yard and started eating the birdseed that I had just thrown out for the sparrows. I was like "what the hell is that?" It looked exotic enough that it might have escaped from somewhere, but it wasn't in my bird book, so I had no idea what it was except it looked vaguely chickenlike, but could fly. Finally, I called my friend who grew up on a farm, because I figured she could tell me if chickens could fly or not and when I said this large grey chickenlike bird was in my yard, she said "it's a helmeted guinea fowl" (or some such thing) and it turned out it had been in her yard a mile away the previous week eating her birdseed. I actually tracked down someone in the suburbs who has a bunch of guinea hens and said she would take it if I could catch it, but alas, it was smarter than me and was onto my trick of leaving a trail of birdseed leading up to a large pet carrier. I was actually going to try to grab it like the woman said I could, but it knew what I was up to and flew up onto the neighbors' deck and then onto the garage roof and then flew off somewhere else. So, there may still be a guinea fowl on the loose on the north side of Chicago.

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Oh my goodness. I love animal stories like this, and yes I would totally believe that was birdy-birdy. Dogs know things like this!

Goodness, goodness, all weepy now. But the good kind :lol:

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Aw! Wonderful story!

 

Minilux's guinea fowl story reminds me of a mystery bird that took up residence one night on our side stoop. It was a large, roundish, grey thing with a tiny quailish head that we ID'd as some sort of mourning dove. It was just hanging out on the stoop. We cooed at it a couple times and it actually came closer. We used the front door to leave and it stayed put even as we warmed up the car and drove off.

 

Haven't seen him since, but there was evidence of his being up there about a week later.

 

Valentina, you really have a way with animals!

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I just realized that Birdy-Birdy reminds me of the baby bunny who frequents our yard who I've been calling Bun-Bun. Our upstairs neighbors have named him Baxter. I was kind of worried after not seeing him for a few days, but my boyfriend saw him out there today.

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I just finished reading that 1970's novel "Watership Down" for the first time, and now I call every little bunny "Fiver." Either that, or the Wascal Wabbit. :lol:

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