Feeding baby crows
How to Care for a Crow That Can't Fly
By Deborah Whistler | Updated September 26, 2017Things You'll Need
Large box
Oatmeal
Ground beef heart
Hard-boiled egg yolk
Avian vitamin supplement
Turkey starter
High-protein dog food or puppy chow
Unsalted peanuts
Corn
Sunflower seeds
Fresh fruit
Mealworms
Crickets
If you come across an orphaned or abandoned crow, you should first be sure it is indeed in need of assistance. Fledgling birds that have left the nest are often unable to fly and remain on the ground. The baby crow’s parents may be nearby and still caring for it. Observe for a while to see if the parents return. If not, or if the bird is in danger of predators, rescue it. First check to see if you can take it to a local wildlife rehabilitator. If no one is available to care for the bird, you can hand raise it for release when it’s old enough to fly or survive on its own.
Line a large box with newspaper to house the bird. Place a small bowl of water in the box for the bird to drink from.
Prepare a mixture of oatmeal, ground beef heart and hard-boiled egg yolk. You can add an avian vitamin supplement with calcium to promote bone growth.
Put a glob of the mixture on your finger and insert it into the baby crow’s gaping beak.
Stick your finger well into the bird’s throat as the mother bird would with her beak. This stimulates the swallowing reflex in the baby. Fed the bird every three to four hours in this fashion until it is 6 weeks old.
Begin offering other foods at 6 weeks. Crows are omnivores, and will eat almost anything, so are somewhat easier to raise than most baby birds. Youngsters need a diet that is at least 25 to 50 percent protein. Turkey starter is a good beginning to the diet. High-protein dog food or puppy chow is also good and usually easier to obtain. Continue feeding hard-boiled egg yolks. Other good foods are unsalted peanuts, corn, sunflower seeds, fresh fruit, and mealworms or crickets.
Keep human contact with your young crow as limited as possible and maximize its exposure to the local crows. Take it outside and let other crows investigate. It will stand a better chance of survival when released if it is accepted into a crow family.
Release the crow at about 8 weeks of age. Once it can fly, it should be released. The bird will likely stick around and beg to be fed. But by fall it will hopefully integrate with a flock.
Warnings
Keeping a crow as a pet is illegal without a permit.
Do not feed the crow too many mealworms; they are high in chitin and can cause blockages.
All birds are lactose intolerant, do not feed baby crows milk or cream of any kind.
References
- American Society of Crows and Ravens: How do I Take Care of a Pet Crow or Raven?
- Cornell Lab of Ornithology: Baby Crows
- Crows: "Orphan" Crows
Photo Credits
baby crows
baby crowsI found a baby crow that must have fallen from the nest/been abandoned/is injured!
The following information pertains
specifically to baby crows, but much of it also applies to other
baby songbirds as well.
What should I do with it?
How can you tell the difference between a fledgling and a nestling?
But, if I don't pick it up my cat/dog will kill it.
Why do birds come out of the nest so early if they can't fly for another week?
I'm sure it's injured, and therefore must need my help. What do I do now?
Well, what's the harm in raising a baby bird?
Well, anyway, I've got this bird that I can't return to its parents. Or, I'm a licensed wildlife rehabilitator, and how can I do the best for the crows in my care?
What is an adequate diet for a nestling/fledgling crow?
Someone gave me this healthy fledgling crow, but I don't know where it came from, so I can't return it to its family.
Should I try to get the local crows to adopt it or should I just raise it myself?
What should I do with it?
If in doubt, LEAVE IT ALONE.
Although I fully understand and sympathize with the desire to rescue baby wildlife, it probably is wisest to leave all wild animals alone. I am completely convinced that more young birds are unnecessarily ripped away from their parents and tortured/killed by well meaning people than are ever rescued. I believe that more young animals would survive if people would just leave them alone.
Ask yourself the following questions:
Why do you think it has fallen from the nest? Do you see a damaged nest? Birds almost never fall from their nests unless the structure has been damaged.
Is this a nestling or a fledgling? Do you know the difference?
If not, read on and try to figure it out. A nestling
could use the help; a fledgling needs to be left alone.
Why do you think it is abandoned? Do you see a dead parent nearby? Most animal parents leave their young for long periods of time while they forage for food. Unless you know for a fact that the parents are dead, assume they are nearby watching worriedly.
Why do you think it is injured? Do you see blood or other signs of trauma? Not being able to fly or being uncoordinated is often misleading. (See below for more information.)
If an animal is in immediate harm's way, it should be moved
into a safer area. By this I mean a bird in the middle of the
street, or on the ground in the middle of a yard with a cat in
it, or something similar. A bird on the ground can be put up in a
bush or low tree that would keep it out of the reach of dogs or
children. Ideally the cover location would have dense foliage
that would conceal the bird and would be connected to more shrubs
and trees that the bird could climb to.
One of the most frequent problems with "rescuing" wildlife is that the youngsters are doing fine and do not need help. Instead of being orphaned, they are being watched attentively by concerned parents, who often are making quite a ruckus while their babies are kidnapped.
Many people seem to expect birds to be able to fly on their
own when they leave the nest. Most cannot, but rather leave the
nest a week to 10 days before they can fly. People who see them
assume that they have fallen from their nest. Here is the
reality: birds just don't fall from their nests! The
parents usually build nice sturdy nests. Only incredibly
infrequently will the nest be disturbed enough that a nestling
will fall out. In some species, however, and crows are one of
these species, nestling birds may be THROWN out of the nest. That
is, it is in the best interests of the parent birds to get rid of
some of their own offspring, and they accomplish this by tossing
a couple of kids. (Life is not pretty!) But, such things happen
only relatively infrequently! (In these cases putting the young
back in the nest will probably result in them getting tossed
again. Either that, or that one will drag the rest of the nest
into starvation with it.)
How can you tell the difference between a fledgling and a nestling?
For most songbirds, there is a good rule of thumb: the rule of
the thumb! By that I mean, can the bird sit up on your thumb (or
finger) on its own? If it can, then it is a FLEDGLING and should
be left alone! Nestling songbirds cannot balance on their own or
grip a perch until right at fledging. If the bird can balance ok,
then it is SUPPOSED to be out of the nest. It may not look like
it, but it is. It will have some feathers over much (but not all)
of its body, and the wing and sometimes the head feathers will be
sticking out of little tubes (the feather sheathes). It might
still have tufts of down on its head or on other parts of the
body.
So, if it seems ok, not injured, just unable to fly, and it can perch on its own, you should PUT IT BACK WHERE YOU FOUND IT. Even if the parents weren't right there yelling at you, chances are that they know where the baby was and were doing all they could to take care of it. Don't worry about them abandoning it because you touched it; birds don't do that. (They might, however, abandon nests if you get too close, especially if they have eggs and not nestlings.) Just get it back to where they can find it and where it will be safe. Don't put it in an enclosed area that the parents will be afraid to go into. Get it somewhere it can eventually move off on its own.
But, if I don't pick it up my cat/dog will kill it.
Well then, keep your pet inside until the bird is gone. This
helpless stage is temporary, and the bird will be gone in a
couple of days. Is it too much to ask to keep your pets under
control that long?
Why do birds come out of the nest so early if they can't fly for another week?
They come out for a good reason, namely that the nest is a
very dangerous place to be. People tend to think of birds' nests
as little homes that they return to each night, where it is cozy
and warm. In fact for most birds, nests are a tragedy waiting to
happen, and they leave them absolutely as quickly as possible.
Think about it this way. Imagine that you are a small bird. You
have lots of enemies that would like to eat you and your
offspring (and eggs). What is your best course of action, go back
to the same spot every night, or sleep hidden in different spots
every night? What about your babies? Do you keep them together in
one spot, or do you spread them out and move them around as soon
as you can? Imagine that you have a nest hidden in a bush, and
there is a raccoon that is looking for it. If that raccoon checks
one bush every day, soon or later he is going to find your nest.
Therefore, the sooner you can get those kids out of there, the
better. Then you can spread them out and move them around to a
different spot every night. Think about all those eggs and that
one basket. It makes even more sense for birds to avoid that
situation than people.
This is not just an abstract idea, either. During my
dissertation work I studied the behavior of fledgling Florida
Scrub-Jays, and I noticed that the first ten days out of the nest
(they fledge on average at 18 days old) were by far the most
dangerous. It seemed to me that the survival of the young might
increase if they stayed in the nest until they could fly (at day
28). But, when I calculated the numbers, I found out differently.
For reasons stated above in the raccoon example, a nest has a
decreasing chance of survival as the nestling period progresses.
I took the data on that risk for scrub-jay nests, and then
compared it with data on fledgling survival. What I found was
that if the jays stayed in their nests for another ten days they
would actually gain ZERO advantage over coming out at the normal
time. And after that time being outside the nest is significantly
safer than staying in it. Yes, there are cats, raccoons, and
hawks out there that would love to snatch up a nearly helpless
baby bird, but if those baby birds can move around they will have
a better chance than if they sit still.
Well, I'm sure it's injured, and therefore must need my help. What do I do now?
What makes you think it is injured? Is it bloody? Or is it
just that it cannot fly? It is difficult to realize that baby
crows are in fact babies. When a young crow leaves the nest it
will be somewhere around 80 to 100% adult body weight, have legs
that will never grow any further, and wings that are nearly full
size. This is a large bird, to be sure, up to 300 to 450 g in
weight. But they still cannot fly! I have had a number of
fledgling crows picked up off the ground because the people
thought they were injured. When I found them perfectly healthy
and told the people that they couldn't fly because they were
still just babies, the inevitable response was "But it's so
BIG."
If it really is injured, if one wing looks substantially
droopier than the other, if it has blood on its body, or it
cannot grip with one foot, then find
professional assistance. Do not try to fix it on
your own. Call a veterinarian in your area, or get the bird to a
licensed wildlife rehabilitator. Caring for wild animals is
difficult, and requires specialized knowledge. If you do not know
of a wildlife rehab person in your area, try looking for one at http://wildliferehab.virtualave.net.
Call the closest person and see if they will take your bird, or
knows someone who will.
Be aware that IT IS ILLEGAL TO POSSESS WILD ANIMALS, and that there are very good reasons for these laws. The main reason is to ensure that both the animal and the people remain safe.
Well, what's the harm in raising a baby bird? It will just go off and live its life and I'll have had the enjoyment of being close to a wild animal.
First of all, remember that IT IS ILLEGAL TO POSSESS WILD ANIMALS.
Close contact with wild animals can be a changing point in
someone's life, making a nature lover out of an indifferent
cynic. Unfortunately, it can change the animal's life too, and
usually not for the better. In the case of crows several factors
are involved. The biggest danger to a baby crow is ignorance on
the part of the caregiver. Do you know how to care for a baby
bird? How have you learned this information? It is NOT all common
sense. If you think it is, you will probably either kill or
torture the babies in your care without knowing it.
First of all, raising a baby bird is a LOT OF WORK! Baby birds need to be fed every 10-20 minutes or so, every day for their entire period of dependence. (Crows are dependent for about 2.5 months.) That's dawn to dusk, every day. You can't just leave them home with food in the cage until you get home from work. They can't feed themselves, but must have it pushed down their throats. At least twice an hour, every daylight hour, for several weeks. This is a big commitment! That is one of the reasons that rehabilitators hate to see healthy fledglings come in the door.
DIRECT EFFECTS ON THE BIRD
Diet and Nutrition. One of the most common
problems is ignorance of proper diets. You are undoubtedly aware
that not all birds eat the same things. Some, like cardinals eat
primarily seeds, while others like warblers eat almost
exclusively insects. So too are nestling diets somewhat
specialized. Most baby songbirds are fed mostly insects and other
animal foods, along with some plant foods. Some species, such as
herons and seabirds have very specialized diets. Just as man
cannot live by bread alone, so too do young birds have problems
with simplified or inadequate diets. No bird can live on a diet
of bread and milk! (Never feed dairy products to birds. Birds are
all lactose intolerant (can't digest milk sugar), and if fed too
much they will get diarrhea.) Nor, can they live on hamburger
alone. If inadequate diets are given baby birds they may die, or
grow up with health problems.
Stress (read "torture"). Do you
know what the mental state of that animal is? Do you know when it
is scared? Are you comforting it or stressing it? (Hint: no wild
animal wants to be petted). This is one of the biggest arguments
for why it is legal to shoot crows but illegal to keep them as
pets. It is legal to give them a quick and clean death, but
illegal to torture them to death.
Is that bird begging or yelling at you? Crows
younger than 26 days old will beg at anything that moves. If you
pick up a youngster before that age it will imprint on you and
beg incessantly. Crows older than this age become wary and only
beg at those things recognized as "parents." If you get
a fledgling, it will gape at you and vocalize, but it is not
hungry (necessarily), and it is not happy to see you. It actually
it is frightened and is yelling at you to keep away. The good
part of this is that you can still stuff food down its throat.
The bad part is, of course, that you are stressing the bird. How
do you tell the difference? Begging crows will try to get closer.
They will stand up and stretch their necks toward you. Scared
crows will lean away and might huddle against the wall of their
box or cage. If a crow in a box has its head tucked between its
wings or has its feet closest to you, it is scared. If it wants
you to feed it, the face will be closest.
INDIRECT EFFECTS
Future Survival. One common problem with hand
raised crows is that if they are taken early enough they easily
become imprinted on humans. This might seem like a good thing
while you are raising it, but it is definitely a BAD thing. Crow
babies make wonderful pets and are very appealing. Being very
social they want to interact with you constantly (like a puppy,
way more than a kitten). They are very curious and get into lots
of funny situations. They are very personable, have very distinct
personalities, and might even learn to say a few words (often
only to one specific person). The downside of this behavior is
that it makes them unafraid of people and very vulnerable in the
wild. Over
the course of my studies on crows I have spoken to a large number
of people who have raised them as pets. All speak lovingly of the
experience, but consistently, the stories end in one of two ways:
1) The crows start leaving for a day or so at a time (usually in
the fall), and then are never seen again, or 2) some neighbor or
someone nearby kills them when they are too friendly/aggressive.
Usually this involves the crow trying to land on the head of an
unsuspecting person or their children, which results in the crow
being hit and killed with a stick or broom. I was astounded at
the number of people whose stories ended this way. What I have
almost never heard is the one I would expect the most, knowing
normal crow behavior: that the crows left and kept coming back
intermittently for a year or two. My wife had pet raccoons that
did that, and I had a friend who raised a bobcat that did that,
but I have spoken to only one or two people who have ever had a
hand raised crow do that. I suspect that they don't get the
chance because they got killed soon after they went out on their
own.
I have marked only six crows that were raised by humans. One was killed by an owl (apparently as soon as it was released), a second was hit on the road and killed shortly after its release, a third was shot in the winter by a hunter in Pennsylvania (about 70 miles south of its release point), a fourth hung around its caretaker's for quite a while until it was presumed taken by a Cooper's Hawk, and the last two were never seen again after leaving their caretakers in the fall. No angry human kills yet, but one came very close; it would have been killed if it had not been transported away to another site.
The sample size is small, but contrast the
survival (or lack thereof) of these birds with that of my marked
birds that were allowed to stay with their families. Of about 750
crows that I have marked late in the nestling stage over 10
years, over 50% of them were still alive the following spring. Of
course the actual survival rate could be higher, as some of the
ones I have not seen subsequently could have gone off somewhere
else to live, or have eluded me in my follow-up searches
(unfortunately, all too possible). Still, this is a remarkably
high survival rate for passerine birds. Young crows still seem to
get a lot of survival skills and knowledge from their parents and
older brothers and sisters long after they are feeding
themselves. I can't help but think that having an older family
member around saying "Watch out for that!" or
"Don't go down to that roadkill yet!" could have an
important impact on a young crow's survival.
Social skills. Young crows may stay with
their parents for a year or more, sometimes many years. While at
home they forage together and stay near each other. Young crows
learn a lot more than just what to eat and how to catch it. They
also learn what is dangerous and what is not, and perhaps a
number of skills that will allow them to prosper in crow society
later on. In addition, they form family bonds that can last years
and can influence the strategies that crows can use to find a
breeding opportunity. (For example, a male crow might join a
brother to help him raise young for a few years until another
breeding spot becomes available.) Crows raised by people will
have none of these advantages or opportunities for learning. It
is possible that hand raised crows can join up with the large
aggregations in the fall and learn how to be crows at that time.
And then again, they might not. No studies have been published
about the survival of captive raised crows, but it seems to me
unlikely that they will be nearly as high as the high values I
find for my wild crows. And because none of the hand raised
marked crows I have followed have survived the first winter, I do
not know if they would have had social problems too.
Well, I've got this
bird that I can't return to its parents. Or, I'm a licensed
wildlife rehabilitator, and how can I do the best for the crows
in my care?
What is an adequate diet for a nestling/fledgling crow?
Crows are omnivores, and as such are somewhat easier to raise
than some other species. The main thing is, growing youngsters
need HIGH PROTEIN diets. Somewhere around 25 - 50% protein.
Turkey starter is a good beginning to the diet. High protein dog
food or puppy chow is also good and usually easier to obtain.
(Both should be supplemented, though.) Look at the bags and get
something as high protein as possible. Even then, it's only going
to be around 27% protein. (Compare this amount with canned cat or
dog food, and you'll see why they are not recommended.) You can
supplement the protein content by adding protein powders or
unflavored gelatin powder. Also as a part of the basic diet, add
boiled eggs (especially important is the yolk) and include the
shells (mashed up). Crows need a lot of calcium, so you might
want to supplement with some other calcium source too. To 2 parts
of the dog food you can add one part of cooked high protein baby
cereal, then add one egg per every 2 cups of the formula. This is
the basic mixture, and you can supplement it with things like
mealworms or crickets, and raw beef kidney. As the birds get
older and can feed themselves, offer them peanuts (unsalted),
corn, sunflower seeds, fresh fruit, and mealworms or crickets. Do
not feed too many mealworms! Mealworms are high in chitin, and
can cause blockage problems if fed in too high frequency.
(Mealworms alone are not an adequate diet for an insectivorous
bird.) Once the crows are old enough to work food on their own
(not until late summer or fall, probably), mice and day old
chicks are favorite foods, if you can get them.
Someone gave me
this healthy fledgling crow, but I don't know where it came from,
so I can't return it to its family. Should I try to get the local
crows to adopt it or should I just raise it myself?
Should you try to "give" this youngster to the local
family? Maybe. We still have much to learn about individual
recognition in animals. Although I am convinced that crows can
recognize other individual crows, even if they have not seen them
for months or years, I have no clue when or how they learn these
skills. I have successfully reintroduced a kidnapped fledgling to
its family after a two week absence. The family still had other
dependent fledglings, and that probably was important. The
initial meeting of the crows was a little rocky, with the
youngster begging and being submissive while the attending adult
investigated and then pecked the chick. After that, however, it
was taken back in and fed again. This last year I also had a
tagged young crow switch families. Two nests in adjoining
territories were placed quite close together, and when the young
of the two families fledged they apparently got even closer. One
of the youngsters somehow went with the wrong family and was
raised by it all summer. So, adoptions can happen.
Some female crows in my study have joined families that were not their own and did not have a breeding vacancy. They seemed to accomplish this feat by sheer persistence. They followed the family wherever it went, keeping a polite, but short distance. They were often chased by the family, but they persisted. After months of this persistence I saw no more aggression. Two crows eventually took over the breeding position when the breeding female died, and the other found a vacancy nearby the adopted family. It is possible that a young crow introduced into another family's territory could join that family through a similar pattern of persistence.
I encourage you to keep human contact with your young crow as
limited as possible and to maximize its exposure to the local
crows. The more it thinks it is a crow the better. If the family
got to know this youngster from daily visits, once it was
free-flying they might accept it. I would watch for the
opportunity to get them together.
In any case, crows need other crows. If possible, keep several or all the crows you have together. Young crows should be released in groups if possible. Any captive wild crow will be unhappy if it is alone. I had a caged non-releasable adult female crow for a while, and all she did was pace back and forth and destroy the cocoa fiber mat in her cage. The moment I put in a second non-releasable crow (fortunately a male), she calmed down and showed no more neurotic behavior.
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Last updated 06-Apr-05
How to feed a crow that has fallen out of the nest - tips
A crow that has fallen out of the nest has a better chance of survival with the participation of a person. Feeding a raven chick is easy. It is important to follow a certain diet, feeding regimen and avoid certain foods. This bird has a sufficient supply of vitality, you need to take a little care of it: first teach it to swallow food, and then eat on its own. Ravens are highly intelligent and quickly get used to people. Some birds remain good friends in the house forever.
Permitted products
When the chick has not yet opened its eyes and is weak, feeding is done with a syringe or tweezers. The lump of food must be placed further away in the beak to provoke the swallowing reflex. Soon the bird realizes that it is being fed, and begins to open its beak itself, asking for food. The question of what to feed the crow requires detailed study.
It is convenient to feed the crow at home with wet mixtures - mash. Their basis is grated carrots and cereal flakes steamed in boiling water. Carrots allow you to saturate the chick with nutrients and moisture. The proportion of carrots in mixtures should be 30-40%. In addition to carrots, turnips or rutabaga also serve as the basis of the mash.
Flakes can be oat, wheat, corn, buckwheat, barley, rye. They are poured with boiling water and cooled to body temperature - 36-37℃. Lumps of the mash should not be sticky, otherwise it is difficult for the chick to swallow them. The share of cereal flakes in the mixture is 30%. When the bird begins to eat on its own, the flakes are changed to boiled cereals from the same grains, boiled in water without salt and sugar.
Protein sources have been indispensable ingredients in formulas since the early days. This is the egg yolk of a hard-boiled egg, minced meat or fish, fat-free cottage cheese. The share of these products in mash should be 30%. In the first weeks of life, ready-made meat purees for baby food are suitable for the chick: with turkey, veal, chicken.
In nature, crows feed their chicks with earthworms and various larvae. At home, you can give a crow of flour worms, ant eggs, dry ground gammarus.
Additional components of the mixers: calcium supplements and vitamins. The metabolism of chicks is intense, therefore, in the absence of the necessary substances, for example, vitamin D or riboflavin, ailments quickly occur. The bird may not get up for a long time or there is a curvature of the paws. An overdose is also dangerous. It usually occurs if the bird is given vitamins intended for humans. It is necessary to carefully calibrate the dose of drugs.
Supplements with important elements should make up 5-10% of the feed. It is good to use bone and fish meal, chalk, crushed eggshells, crushed germinated wheat grains, multivitamins from a pet store.
Thus, the ratio of products in mixtures should be as follows:
- 30-40% - fiber;
- 30% - grain;
- 30% protein;
- 5-10% - vitamins, minerals.
Liquids
As long as the chick is not eating on its own, it does not need to drink water or any other liquid. The necessary moisture enters the body with solid food. Drinking it from a syringe in the first weeks is even dangerous because it can choke.
When the crow starts to eat on its own, you can put a saucer of water freely available to it. The water must be soft. Do not offer your chick tap water that contains chlorine, even in small quantities. It is optimal to use purified or purchased water heated to room temperature.
What not to feed the crow
Some foods are contraindicated for the chick. Giving them even in small quantities is dangerous for the life of the bird. Among them:
- milk;
- sweets;
- salty foods;
- fried foods;
- fatty foods;
- smoked products;
- juices;
- exotic fruits.
Diet
In the first two weeks after hatching, the chick is weak, lacks thermoregulation and needs frequent feeding and additional heating. During this period, the crow needs to be fed every 1. 5-2 hours in small portions. The break is done only at night. In the period from 12 am to 6 am, the chick is not fed, it is constantly in the nest prepared for it from soft natural fabric. The grown chick is fed 3-4 times a day.
The chick defecates every time it eats. He shakes his tail, raises his tail so that the litter is outside the nest. At this point, it is advisable to prepare toilet paper in order to remove the litter immediately after feeding. After a night in the "nest" the litter is changed every day.
What to do if you picked up a baby crow? | Animals
Nature burst into my life in May, when on the sidewalk near the house I found a crow that had fallen out of its nest. There are not many answers on the Internet to the question of what to do with the found crow, so I will share with you everything that I have learned from my own experience.
Around April, chicks hatch in crow nests. It should be noted that crows have chicks once a year. And in mid-July, they gain independence. And everything would be fine, but only crows, fearing cats, build their nests at the height of a nine-story building. And when little crows strive to know this world, they often fall out of the nest and become crippled.
If you are not indifferent to the rescue of animals, and you have found a crow, first of all inspect it. If he is visually safe and sound, there is an option to grow him up at home until he can live on his own, that is, until about August. Because there is no way to launch it back into the nest. But most often, when falling from the nest, crows still do not remain unharmed - a wing or beak can be dislocated.
If you see that there is a problem with the beak or wings, you should immediately take the chick to the veterinarian. The fact is that within six days the bones of birds grow together, and six days after the fracture, the bone can no longer be set, it will have to be broken again. The clinic is not an ordinary one, birds are treated where there are ornithologists. Find out in your city where you have such a specialist.
If your pet survived the fall, then you need to think about where to raise it until August. The thing is, he doesn't know how to eat. And he will have to feed 3-4 times a day.
I fed my baby crow with a teaspoon. He croaked and opened his beak wide, wide, and I threw food into his mouth from a spoon.
What to feed the little crow? Crows are predators. And meat must be included in their diet. Here you need to know a few things.
Ravens should never eat fat, salt or sugar!
It's great to boil lean meat, grind it, add low-fat cottage cheese, stir in such a porridge and go. You can add grated fruits, you can cook rice or some other cereal, but do not forget about meat. If the chick is not fed meat, it will become emaciated and may become ill from malnutrition.
He eats a little: a few teaspoons at a time.
Where to keep the chick? I kept mine on a glazed balcony, this is the best option. If there is no balcony, then it is possible in the apartment, but in the aviary. It is good to build a nest for him in a box.
The aviary is needed so that the chick does not pollute everything around in the apartment. But, in principle, if you become so attached to your little crow that you decide to keep him permanently, then you can teach him to go to the toilet in one special place.
Gradually, the crow will try to sit on your arm, and if you work with him, you can even teach him to speak, sit on your shoulder, serve slippers, pull fleas out of your dog's fur and much more. Birds from the corvid family are considered among the most intelligent. In addition, crows become attached to the owner, like dogs.
It will be possible to find out what gender your chick is only after six months. In the meantime, he is just a child who needs the help of an adult. And since you are reading this article, it means that you are the adult that this baby needs.