Several days ago, while walking to the local shops, I came across a very young blackbird which had apparently been dislodged from its nest by the strong winds the day before.
I know blackbirds "fledge" quite early and often spend a week running around on the ground with short wings and no tail, but this youngster has most of its feathers unopened, with large bald patches and areas of brownish-yellow fluff.
It was sat on a footpath, at the base of a wall, along the side of a road - wide open to predator attack. It was so docile that it was oblivious to my presence - if I was a cat I could easily have caught it.
I paused for a few minutes, looking at it. I wondered what to do for the best because I usually leave nature to do its own thing.
But I felt that its chances of survival were very low - either from cats, magpies, sparrowhawks or even the road just a few feet away. So I picked it up and took it home.
I've had it on a "no dairy products" and "nothing with a skin on it unless it's been cut open" diet, which includes feeding it match-head sized, to pea-sized pieces of all the following (4-5 mouthfuls every 1-2 hours, placed/dropped deep into its throat):
Apple
Pear
Orange
Banana
Chopped raisins/sultanas
Chopped-up worms
Squashed flies
Crushed woodlice, ants and aphids
Wetted/sloppy biscuit
Wetted/sloppy bread
It was weak, quiet and rather lacking in life the first day, but has perked up tremendously and sits happily chattering away in a large cage.
I let it out of the cage a couple of times a day to run/flutter around the floor.
But did I do the right thing by "rescuing" it, or should I have left nature to take its course - especially considering the number of worms, flies etc that I'm having to kill to feed it - and considering that I'm not sure whether this bird will be able to have a normal life in the wild now that it's completely accustomed to humans.
I know blackbirds "fledge" quite early and often spend a week running around on the ground with short wings and no tail, but this youngster has most of its feathers unopened, with large bald patches and areas of brownish-yellow fluff.
It was sat on a footpath, at the base of a wall, along the side of a road - wide open to predator attack. It was so docile that it was oblivious to my presence - if I was a cat I could easily have caught it.
I paused for a few minutes, looking at it. I wondered what to do for the best because I usually leave nature to do its own thing.
But I felt that its chances of survival were very low - either from cats, magpies, sparrowhawks or even the road just a few feet away. So I picked it up and took it home.
I've had it on a "no dairy products" and "nothing with a skin on it unless it's been cut open" diet, which includes feeding it match-head sized, to pea-sized pieces of all the following (4-5 mouthfuls every 1-2 hours, placed/dropped deep into its throat):
Apple
Pear
Orange
Banana
Chopped raisins/sultanas
Chopped-up worms
Squashed flies
Crushed woodlice, ants and aphids
Wetted/sloppy biscuit
Wetted/sloppy bread
It was weak, quiet and rather lacking in life the first day, but has perked up tremendously and sits happily chattering away in a large cage.
I let it out of the cage a couple of times a day to run/flutter around the floor.
But did I do the right thing by "rescuing" it, or should I have left nature to take its course - especially considering the number of worms, flies etc that I'm having to kill to feed it - and considering that I'm not sure whether this bird will be able to have a normal life in the wild now that it's completely accustomed to humans.
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