Recycling in the Bird world
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 18:08 last edited by
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 18:10 last edited by
You are so right Shelley. Poor soul.
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 19:15 last edited by
I have a family of robins (well, american robins) that usually make a nest on my back poarch. So this year I put out pretty fabic scraps and alpaca fiber so they could make the nicest nest on the block. but mr. and mrs. robin refused to use any of the nest building materials i put out. :confused:
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 19:46 last edited by
I have a family of robins (well, american robins) that usually make a nest on my back poarch. So this year I put out pretty fabic scraps and alpaca fiber so they could make the nicest nest on the block. but mr. and mrs. robin refused to use any of the nest building materials i put out. :confused:
Ungrateful Robins agile, are american Robins different to British ones then?
When we had Max our big Dog, i used to leave his fur around after grooming and it went to form many a good nest :) -
wrote on 1 May 2010, 19:52 last edited by
OMG!!! Are those straws or syringes????
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 19:55 last edited by
There straws Belinda, there is a take away nearby, some folks find it too difficult to use a bin.
Notice the slices of Bread, must be a snack for later :D -
wrote on 1 May 2010, 20:39 last edited by
I had a friend who was in WW2 in the Soviet Red Army. He said they'd use Western style white bread as battle wound dressing. He said they thought it had too much air to be filling enough to eat, but it worked perfectly for bullet holes. (I know…a little off topic, but interesting anyway.)
Back on topic...perhaps she's using it as padding?
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 20:50 last edited by
Check out these pics of dead birds and what was inside them after decaying. I posted it on Facebook a couple of weeks ago. It's called "An ocean of plastic…in birds guts.
It's a slide show of 30 pics of different birds. You'll be shocked at what they ate.
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 20:55 last edited by
Oh dear, I can barely look at the picture of the nest, so I definitely can't look at the pic of what was inside dead birds. :( But I can watch any gory, bloody medical show on TV with great interest. I guess my heart is just too soft when it comes to innocent animals.
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wrote on 1 May 2010, 22:57 last edited by
Ungrateful Robins agile, are american Robins different to British ones then?
When we had Max our big Dog, i used to leave his fur around after grooming and it went to form many a good nest :)oh yes, very different. american robins are larger and the breast is a chestnut color. Plumage on the sexes are the same. Eggs are a beautiful bright blue.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Robinand even though they are rather ungrateful, i enjoy seeing them around. last year they did not next on my back poarch, but the tree by the garage. the previous 2 years they were on the poarch. I just have to make sure the dogs are always leashed when the fledgelings start hopping out of the nest.
And, for comparison, the English robin:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Robin
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