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I once saw 3 baby blue tits fly the nest which was in the hole in a concrete block. Magpies were surrounding them and despite the parets putting up a brave show they eventualy gave up. i had to intervene and picked the babies up and returned them to their nest. Within minutes out they came again, I returned them over and over but it was no good. In the end i placed them in the hedge where the parents were but as soon as I walked away the magpies got them.
Strictly speaking this is Darwinism at work and the pair of Blue Tits would not be reproducing their genes because making nests in such places was not a good thing. Had I saved the babies I would have been creating a line of birds that had poor decision making abilities. In a similar way the baby bird you found was not as good at hanging onto the nest in a storm as those who didnt fall out. Its a very cruel world is it not.
Not seen him since he went out in the garden a few months ago.
Come to think of it, I haven't seen many garden birds of any sort in the last few weeks.
Put the food out and they will appear, FB.
I put out the pink berry suet mix - attracts the robin, blue tits, great tits, longtailed tits and starlings.
Then the suet balls - minus the net covering - blue tits and starlings mostly.
The sunflower seed feeder - the robin, odd blue tit and goldfinches and chaffinches.
Overhead - the west London Himalayan green parakeet flock.
Once the frost has bitten I get fieldfares and waxwings on the crab apple tree and joy breaks out up and down the street.
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