Hey, how old is it? What have you been feeding it? Was mother around when you found it? Puppyfood works best, just don't use regular dog food. You will have to bring it to worm temperature right before feeding. Supplement the bird with cut mealworms, and fresh meat (beef hearts is what I used). Better yet contact a vet in your area.
It’s probably not domesticated just a not smart/dumb baby do not ineract with it and let it learn how to be wild. Interacting with a baby animal can make the animal domesticated
Oh yes and the comments about you being cruel to the jackdaw are weird. Why would a jackdaw come back time after time if he wasn't enjoying the warmth that you are giving him? Absolutely love it!
I had a tame Jackdaw that I rescued for 10 year's. she was so tame. but this funny Jackdaw is a crazy one Lol. And so many people say why have you got it. and isn't it wrong. Shouldn't it be let free. well mine could fly free when ever she wanted. but always came back. they grow fond of you and those who may be rescued them. mine was funny but this one in the video is special. it absolutely loves what you are doing and just keeps coming back for more. Fantastic. great video. thanks for sharing. 👍
Thanks so much for sharing this! I'm prepping for painting a jackdaw, but since they aren't native to the States, I've never seen one in person. This video helped me get a good feel for the size, sounds, and personality of the bird.
Oh watching this made me so so happy,so heart warming.. I found a jack daw with a broken wing,i wrapped the wing with bandage,i used mild salt water & honey as there was a wound..I re dressed it two weeks later & now I am having trouble keeping his bandage on,his wing droops a little.. He loves listening to you & your family.. If you have get any advice on how I could help him her more I would be very grateful..also he/she hasn't made any sound since I have had him/her..they open there mouth,they are feeding well,they are alert & active.. Have a blessed day & Take care 🤘🏻☮💜🙏🏻🤘🏻☮💜🙏🏻..
Thank you so much for posting this! 9 weeks ago a baby jackdaw fell down our chimney. We dismantled the gas fire to rescue her......(we call her Dora but it is 2 years before you can tell what sex they are) She was too young to feed herself so we hand fed her with raw meat. Luckily we have an empty property where she is living at the moment. A few weeks ago we let her go but she was obviously too young and after a brilliant attempt at flying around she unfortunately crash landed across the road. (No cats around thankfully!) She is healthy now and after a lot of research we can finally release her next month. She is getting to feed herself now but she misjudges distances and crashed into things. Also it is 3 months before their eye sight is developed. They need social skills so they can interact with other birds too. This video has given us hope that she will come to visit us once she has "flown the nest" THANK YOU!
Reminds me of the jackdaws in my neighbourhood (NL) who sit on my arms everyday to eat peanuts out of my hands and then I throw them back up the tree and they LOVE it :'D
I have a jackdaw called Jacky Blue Eyes- I took in when he was orphaned (originally took in him & his brother Bobbin in & Bobbin is now back in the wild) Jacky imprinted on to me & although he was briefly back in the wild (he got spooked one day when we were outside with him & he flew off. He kept coming back to us but we wanted to see of it was possible he could survive in the wild as Bobbin had gone back into the wild no problems- Bobbin never imprinted onto us or was very attatched to us) sadly a few weeks ago poor little Jacky was attacked by the neighbours horrible cat & injured badly so we had to rush him to the vet. He is ok now thankfully but the vet had to clip his wings where the feathers were damaged so now Jacky can't fly & he would die in the wild so he is going to stay with us for the rest of his life. He is such a sweet, affectionate little bird- so tame & loving & very attatched to me & my hubby. We hand feed him & he sits on our shoulders & fluffs up all his feathers & rubs his soft little fuzzy head against our faces, puts his little beak in our ears & shouts down our ears, pulls my hearing aids out, likes to fall asleep on us, cries if we leave the room, plays with his toys with us (he loves little rubber bouncy balls & he even plays football with me by grabbing them with his little feet & nudging them to me with his little beak), he tries to eat out of our mouths & always wants to investigate anything we are doing or have in our hands, he kisses us with his beak & tries to follow us everywhere (a couple of weeks ago I was giving him his daily bath in the dining room & left him in there a few minutes whilst I went to make a cup of tea. A minute later as I was stood in the kitchen waiting for the kettle to boil I heard a really loud, happy cheep behind me & there was Jacky Blue Eyes toddling along the floor as fast as he could flapping his little wings & cheeping like mad looking so happy to have found me). He is just the sweetest little bird- so loving & playful & incredibly intelligent. He loves finding objects & food that I hide for him, responds to his name & even basic commands & loves to explore. Jackdaws are such amazing, beautiful birds & I am truly blessed to have him in my life. I have a video of him on my channel if anyone is interested & if anyone would like to see updates & photos of him you can follow me on twitter @LittleDolly21 Love this video though- such a sweet bird xx
Here's the thing. You said a "jackdaw is a crow." Is it in the same family? Yes. No one's arguing that. As someone who is a scientist who studies crows, I am telling you, specifically, in science, no one calls jackdaws crows. If you want to be "specific" like you said, then you shouldn't either. They're not the same thing. If you're saying "crow family" you're referring to the taxonomic grouping of Corvidae, which includes things from nutcrackers to blue jays to ravens. So your reasoning for calling a jackdaw a crow is because random people "call the black ones crows?" Let's get grackles and blackbirds in there, then, too. Also, calling someone a human or an ape? It's not one or the other, that's not how taxonomy works. They're both. A jackdaw is a jackdaw and a member of the crow family. But that's not what you said. You said a jackdaw is a crow, which is not true unless you're okay with calling all members of the crow family crows, which means you'd call blue jays, ravens, and other birds crows, too. Which you said you don't. It's okay to just admit you're wrong, you know?
Witam! Od lat kawki mają gniazda na dachu pobliskiej szkoły. Co roku kawki zrzucają podlota z dachu, wiem, że tak robią, jednak w tym roku musiałam zabrać podlota do siebie, ponieważ w okolicy jest zbyt dużo kotów. Podlot już się wybarwia na właściwy kolor, jednak ogonek ma jeszcze krótki i nie umie samodzielnie jeść, ani latać. Na początku dawałam mu rozgniecione jajko z odrobiną wody przez strzykawkę, teraz daję mu ryż. Daję mu też połówkę jabłka albo truskawki, nieśmiało próbuje je skubać. Czy mam coś jeszcze dodać do diety? Jak usamodzielnić podlota? Teraz woła jeść co około pół godziny, chciałabym mu trochę pomóc, żeby zaczął sam jeść, ale nie bardzo wiem jak to zrobić. Kawka szybko się oswoiła, siada mi na ramieniu, podlatuje do mnie, nie wiem czy będzie potrafiła przeżyć na wolności. Mam w domu kota, którego się w ogóle nie boi. Bardzo proszę o poradę. Pozdrawiam :)
I don't know if corvids are the same but with a parrot you would never pet the bird like that (down below its head) because you are turning it on sexually.
yeah sometimes im giving my hand to nib by my hamster, dont mind a bit of scratches as many time i got worse from cats and its still play biting for me, sometimes she runs after my finger in circles and nib. Just cuz sometime sis stupid for you doesn't mean it doesnt have sense :D
@@AppleDi If you play with your dog or cat, they'll playfully bite you, it doesn't mean you're being cruel to them. Jackdaws are very intelligent birds, it isn't going to eagerly run back to someone who is abusing it. I have Jackdaws myself, they will playfully peck even when being fed. You're reading "cruelty" into a situation where there isn't any.
I look after many Jackdaws and after observing this sweet little one all I see is love and playfulness, they are very shy birds and the bird would not keep running back to the lady if it wasn't comfortable, 100% he loves her, he is having fun! ;)