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Author Topic: I Love Crows  (Read 6065 times)
RED-DOG
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« Reply #45 on: May 06, 2007, 12:41:15 AM »



 

 
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Claw75
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« Reply #46 on: May 06, 2007, 12:43:28 AM »


  just surprised no ones said the obvious yet Cheesy
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« Reply #47 on: May 06, 2007, 12:44:34 AM »


Not even you.
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« Reply #48 on: May 06, 2007, 12:47:54 AM »

i work outside and my work mate only last year showed me a neat trick...which further went to prove how oblivious i am to nature's wonders



a spider's web...flick a lil bit of paper on it and Mr Spider will after a few seconds rush out to eat his dinner..only to pause when he realises it isnt dinner at all...never mind....then Mr spider manages to unstick the paper and launch it from his web with such skill it never hits the web on the way down to the ground...so when i get the chance i stop and flick bits of papers at webs...from a distance i probably look quite mental....


Oh if u try and do the paper thing again Mr spider aint falling for it again...he never comes out from his hole again for you...MR Spider aint a daftie




wots this got to do with crows...i dunno..they eat spiders dont they?
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« Reply #49 on: May 06, 2007, 12:54:31 AM »

i prefere pheasants . crows taste funny
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« Reply #50 on: May 06, 2007, 12:56:01 AM »

i prefere pheasants . crows taste funny

So do clowns.
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« Reply #51 on: May 06, 2007, 12:56:05 AM »

i work outside and my work mate only last year showed me a neat trick...which further went to prove how oblivious i am to nature's wonders



a spider's web...flick a lil bit of paper on it and Mr Spider will after a few seconds rush out to eat his dinner..only to pause when he realises it isnt dinner at all...never mind....then Mr spider manages to unstick the paper and launch it from his web with such skill it never hits the web on the way down to the ground...so when i get the chance i stop and flick bits of papers at webs...from a distance i probably look quite mental....


Oh if u try and do the paper thing again Mr spider aint falling for it again...he never comes out from his hole again for you...MR Spider aint a daftie




wots this got to do with crows...i dunno..they eat spiders dont they?

With thanks to "Crows.net" here is what Crows eat.....

FOOD AND FEEDING HABITS
Crows are remarkably adaptable birds that will feed on a wide variety of foods, both natural and manmade, although some foods are favored over others and individual crows may have individual preferences. Some of the foods they have been observed to eat are as follows.

All of the following are listed in various publications quoted in "The Life Histories of North American Jays, crows, and Titmice", Brent 1946: Insects (primarily beetles and their larvae and grasshoppers, locusts and crickets), spiders, millipeds, crustaceans, snails, reptiles, amphibians, wild birds and their eggs, poultry and their eggs, small mammals and carrion,May beetles, wireworms, caterpillars, grubs, cutworms, earthworms, clams, scallops, mussels, sea urchins, dead fish, marine invertebrates, dead seal, dead trout, , garbage, road kills (including dogs, cats, chickens, opossums, pigs and skunks) snakes, slaughter house waste, corn, sorghums, wheat, apples, almonds, beans, peas, figs, grapes, cherries, various wild fruits (including sumach, poison-ivy, poison-oak, bayberry, dogwood, sour gum, wild cherries, wild grapes, Virginia creeper, and pokeberry), meadow mice, star-nosed moles, short-tailed shrews, cranberry, juniper berries, smilax winterberry, nightshade berries, barley, corn, buckwheat, pumpkin or squash seeds.

More recently, urban crows will enjoy feeding at garbage dumps, dumpsters at fast food restaurants, picnic areas, and any place where human food waste is available. I have personally observed a crow flying by overhead with an entire slice of pizza in its beak. (MJW)


FEEDING CROWS

 
For the person who wishes to feed crows, any number of easily available foods will do. From personal observations, crows favor foods that have high fat or oil contents and items like bacon, cheese, suet, pizza, french fries, potato chips, corn chips, etc. are often taken in preference to all others. For routine feeding, a dry dogfood with pea sized nuggets seems to work very well. Foods like these have the advantage that, unlike sunflower or other seeds that crows will also eat, they do not attract squirrles (though the interactions of squirrles and crows are fascinating to watch).

During the nesting season, eggs are a highly favored food. In the picture above, a crow is about to fly off with a hardboiled hen's egg. The bird first punched a hole in the egg with its beak, then grasped it as illustrated, and flew off with it with no apparent difficulty.

In early May 2000, I personally observed a crow flying overhead carrying a garter snake that was about a foot long in its beak.

A resident of an assisted living facility reported (May 2000) that the crows were eating all the fish out of their pond. Exactly how they did their fishing was not reported.
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tikay
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« Reply #52 on: May 06, 2007, 01:00:35 AM »

Note "short-tailed shrews".

Presumably, medium or long-tailed shrews don't taste so good?
« Last Edit: May 06, 2007, 01:02:10 AM by tikay » Logged

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« Reply #53 on: May 06, 2007, 01:53:28 AM »


One for sorrow, two for joy, three for girl, four for a boy,five for silver,six for gold,seven for a story never to be told,or something like that she use to tell us.

Oh I hope reading this makes me dream of Susan Stranks tonight, but no doubt I'll end up instead having a nightmare about Mick Robertson and his big hair.   

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« Reply #54 on: May 06, 2007, 02:01:01 AM »


One for sorrow, two for joy, three for girl, four for a boy,five for silver,six for gold,seven for a story never to be told,or something like that she use to tell us.

Oh I hope reading this makes me dream of Susan Stranks tonight, but no doubt I'll end up instead having a nightmare about Mick Robertson and his big hair.   



Took me a min,the tv presenter's of Magpie the kids tv show!!
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