All our birds 🦆🦃🦅🕊🦢🦜🦉🐦
Hello everyone, our dear friends! 😊
Here you can see all our birds in one post.There more than 100 of them so of course I can't put pics of everyone here. I've just grooped them😉
So, who does our feathered team consist of? These are all kinds of birds, wild and domestic. But in our house they all have the status of pets. I never buy birds. Except for the case when I bought a goose so that it does not become someone's dinner ... In all other cases, these are either birds that their owners abandoned or wild birds that got into trouble and became disabled.
Now I will try to list what species of birds live with us. I hope I don't forget anyone:
pigeons,
crows,
turtle dove,
storks,
seagulls,
hawks,
black crows,
owls,
woodcocks,
ducks (wild and domestic),
geese (wild and domestic),
parrots,
finches,
magpie,
jackdaw,
chickens,
woodpecker,
blackbirds,
tit,
hoopoe,
turkeys,
kestrels,
pheasants...
I hope I haven't forgotten anyone ...🤔
They are all different, have different character and different needs. The biggest problem is insectivores. Although this year woodcocks came to us for the first time and I realized that it is as difficult to get earthworms at this time as insects ...
I have already said several times that I no longer accept birds. But when people call me and ask me to take another plagued bird, I cannot refuse ...
I want to say right away that all our birds are disabled. I do not deprive healthy birds of the opportunity to live in nature! The exception is birds, which in our country are exclusively domesticated (parrots, chickens, some species of pigeons).
So, they are here
Not the most numerous, but the most socially active group are storks. They quickly get used to humans and in many ways behave like dogs. They accompany me if I do something in the garden, they are interested in what is happening around.
Common domestic chickens, ducks, geese and turkeys. There are few of them and each has its own history. People found someone on the highway because it fell out of the truck. Someone was bought by me from local residents so that it does not become dinner ...
Hooded crows. This detachment is replenished every spring, when crow chicks who have lost their parents come en masse. Whenever possible, I try to grow them, adapt and return them to the wild.
Small wild birds. If a bird comes to me as an adult, I will cure it and release it. Chicks are a different story. If a chick is raised in captivity, it has no chance of survival in the wild. Then it will have a spacious outdoor enclosure.
Falcons and hawks. Now we have only those of these birds who have lost their wing. Unlike storks, pigeons and hooded crows, these birds are not very well adapted to life next to humans. I always do my best to bring them back to the wild whenever possible.
The same about owls.
Our seagulls. Now there are five of them. Each of them needs to be told separately, because they are all real personalities.
And all the others:

