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.






I know i'd be the first one running down the beach scaring off the seagulls dive bombing and attacking the poor things. I'd be the one throwing stranded starfish back into the sea, and pushing stray dolphins back into the water. What you've done is lovely, kind and heartening to hear 
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