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#1
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Do feral pigeons make nest during winter?Just what the title says, do they actually do it? I am just curios about this. I actually never seen a feral nest before now that I think about it. I live in an area where feral pigeons don't seem to exist. For that matter, almost light posts have bird spikes in them. In one area where I used to see lots of ferals all of them suddenly disappeared. I am guessing the worst and they probably all got killed. A flock of pigeons by a hundred can't just suddenly disappear.
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#2
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They nest all year long here in Portland.
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Charis If all the beasts were gone, men would die from great loneliness of spirit, for whatever happens to the beasts also happens to the man. Seattle 1736-1866 ![]() Another Life, Gone To The Birds! DO NO HARM Member, International Wildlife Rehabilitation Council |
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#3
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I live in Northern Canada...temps -20 to -30 C ( - 0 to 20 F-ish) at night....and my rescued ferals are nesting!! at least building, one egg but fell and cracked...I think they try anyways but success is better in Spring.
a flock that big CAN move several miles away if the food changes...it happened here where they built a shopping centre near train tracks that transport grain. in Winter the flock moves there for warmth and food, then disperse in good weather. I hope yours have done something similar!
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These creatures are called psychopomps, from the Greek word ψυχοπομπός (psychopompos), literally meaning the "guide of souls". Their role is not to judge the deceased, but simply provide safe passage. Frequently depicted on funerary art, psychopomps have been associated at different times and in different cultures with horses, whippoorwills, ravens, dogs, crows, owls, sparrows, harts, and dolphins. |
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#4
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Wouldn't whether they nest or not depend on the weather, and the availability of food?
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Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#5
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missing birdsQuote:
so given the correct environment it can happen,.,..bird watching,..sincerely james waller |
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#6
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i observe our special feral flock all year round,,and some go "missing"for a bit,few days,sometimes weeks,i am unsure if they go on a "vacation"of sorts,go to another flock for a bit etc,today saw the return of "wafer"(brown hen) i feared the worst as id not seen her for 3 weeks or so,but i reckon she had hooked up with a male from neighbouring flock,observed a lot of nest building going on at station(1 min from my home)its cold,windy and damp here(typical scottish weather lol),so yeah i think nesting pretty much goes on all the time
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#7
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Yes! I have had two feral squeakers passed on to me this month, both from different parts of the city.
I wish ferals didn't nest all year round, but they won't be told! ![]()
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Life is as dear to the mute creature as it is to man. Just as one wants happiness and fears pain, just as one wants to live and not to die, so do other creatures.His holiness the Dalai Lama |
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#8
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Absolutely, I'm sure of that. Where there is plenty of food and places to escape the cold they can afford to nest, but where there is little food and shelter and the weather is extreme, they are just looking to survive.
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Treesa ![]() Plan ahead.............It wasn't raining when Noah built the ark.
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#9
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I have seen feral babies in a nest here in Northern Illinios in Mid-February. They start nesting as soon as the days get longer.
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#10
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Growing up in RI I remember several places where the ferals nested all year long. When the river froze over, I could walk along the edge of it, to the underside of a bridge and catch the ferals at night. I remember quite a few nest had eggs in them and I would let the adults I caught go. But if I pulled one off a nest with no eggs, I took it home and added to my flock.
I remember there were some pretty good colored birds mixed in with them. I always wondered if they were the result of somebodies birds who joined the feral flock and they mated up. Never caught any with bands on them though. |
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#11
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Quote:
__________________
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#12
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becege, makes the best point here, i also have seen nests in Feb., since the days start getting longer Dec.21st, i am sure there is some year round nesting, depending on were you live. But there is none going on around here in Dec. or Jan. at least in the spots i keep an eye on. But in Chicago i have seen huge areas that never got "dark" at all, and i am sure they could. Dave
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#13
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Pigeons in Southern California (where the weather is mild) nest and raise young all year long. I never know when I get that baby in December if it's an early or a very late one ..
Terry |
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#14
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Mostly I kept them because I was a stupid kid and thought more were better. I did eventually let them out to fly and they always came back to my loft. Like I said, they must have mixed with someones private flock, because they had different colors and I liked the colors and some of these birds were BIG! I guess for awhile I was a collector, instead of a fancier.
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#15
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I live almost on the line of R.I. That's funny. Guess they came back to you because they knew they had it much better there than in the wild. LOL. How old were you? How many birds did you have?
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Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |