rivka: (trust beyond reason)
[personal profile] rivka
There's a baby bird in our yard, hopping around and chirping in what sounds like distress. It doesn't seem injured in any way - it's covered a fair bit of ground by hopping, and I've seen it flap its little useless wings.

There's a pair of cardinals that we usually see in the yard next door. When we come into the yard, they hang out on the first-floor roof peeking at us anxiously. I think they must be the parents. The baby has a little bit of a cardinal look to the shape of its head and beak.

We don't know where the baby came from or how it got into our yard. It can't fly. The cardinals have one nest in the yard of the house next door (a chain link fence and other barriers away), but I'm told that they tend to build serial nests and raise more than one family at a time. So there might be a nest closer by to us.

What's the appropriate course of action? Each of us has a different opinion.

Me: As long as the parents are alive and nearby, we should leave the baby alone. It has a better chance with its parents looking after it.

Michael: We should take it to an animal hospital. Or something.

Alex: I think this bird wants to be our pet. I'm going to pick some parsley for it. When we go out again, we need to buy some birdseed.

I'm vetoing Alex's plan that we keep the bird as a pet, but what's a better plan? Help us, LJ.

Updated to add: I don't know why I didn't immediately think to Google "found a baby bird."

Date: 2008-06-03 11:52 pm (UTC)
naomikritzer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] naomikritzer
Leave it alone. (1) The parents are probably right there keeping an eye on it. (2) Even if they aren't, if you take it in and try to hand-raise it it will probably die from the shock. (3) And in that case, it won't even get to serve as a meal to a predator and join the Great Cycle of Life.

Date: 2008-06-04 02:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rivka.livejournal.com
Also: the major predator here is rats. It's hard to be sentimental about their place in the Circle of Life the way I could be about, say, hawks.

Doesn't change our course of action, but it is a sad thought.

Date: 2008-06-04 02:29 am (UTC)
naomikritzer: (Default)
From: [personal profile] naomikritzer
Oh, ick. Not my first choice of predators.

Around here we have raccoons, plus a fair number of raptors (I'm near the Mississippi River and I've seen bald eagles five minutes from my very urban house), but the #1 predator would be the neighbor's cats. (My cats are not allowed out of the house, and thus predate only on wildlife dumb enough to come inside.)

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