Mom Finds Odd Looking Baby Bird Abandoned On The Lawn 1 Year Later, He Looks So Different

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Mom Finds Odd Looking Baby Bird Abandoned On The Lawn 1 Year Later, He Looks So Different
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Right....keep the bird with you for good. Very nice...

johnharding
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I wish all the care she put Into that little starling she gets back ten fold And they have lots Of joy and happiness for years to come. Thank you kind lady for your 💕 love and support

carolnr
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It is amazing that this woman was able to keep this so just hatched bird alive, let alone nurture to adulthood. Wow...kudos to little Starling....

bonitalyon
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This baby bird was so cute. Thank you for caring for it.

susanwest
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I so admire people who have the knack to preserve the life of any bird. I personally have never had that kind of success. Happy that this little Starling has such a sweet lady caring for him.

hendrikasunqrout
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GOD BLESS YOU FOR RESCUING THIS WEE ONE. I RESCUED FOR 50 YRS. SO REWARDING.❤❤❤❤

joycebirr
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I raised a starling when I was 12 or 13 years old. I fed it pablum (baby cereal), and yes, I had to feed it very, very often. Made me feel sorry for the mama birds who have multiple mouths to feed. After it learned to fly (over my bed, covered in newspaper), it would go outside and fly around the block before coming back to our house. We finally took it to a relative's house many miles away. It landed on my uncle's shoulder a day or two later, which surprised him. I hope it had a good life.

mariashaffer-gordon
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That naked baby bird was so small I'm happy it made it

michelesherman
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I am so glad she lived in a place where she could save Clinger and give him his best life. The wild is a brutal place at the best of times.

heidibee
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*GOD BLESS YOU ... AND ESPECIALLY BEAUTIFUL KLINGER !!!*

cynthiarogers
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Thanks 😊for sharing your story! Bless you for taking the time to rescue this baby!

judyhoffman
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Thank you for caring...low bow to you ❤

tiggragg
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I never raised a wild bird, but I've bread parrots, and I'm pretty sure you don't need to feed them that often. Mom really packs their crop full of food. We have a wildlife rescue sanctuary like 20 miles from my house, and we took all kinds of animals there, baby deer, baby racoon, baby rabbit, many wild birds. She told us it was better not to feed them for one night, rather than feed them the wrong food. We had hand feeding formula for the parrots, thought that would work, but it had nothing in it the birds could metabolize.

leoroberts
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When my son was in 3rd grade some kids he knew knocked some Mudswallows nests down off the school building. Well my son Cory had been taught how important all life is, so he grabbed as much of the nesting material he could and 7 or 8 blind baby Swallows and crying profusely back to the house. Upon inspection I found a little box that would keep the birds snuggled next to each other real well, found a corner of his dresser that got good indirect sunlight to keep it at. I then gave him a jar and told him to go to the field next door and find as many grasshoppers as he could preferably the smallest ones, which he did, while he did that I took a Turkey baster and poured a bottle of electrolyte water in a bowl. I sucked it up into the baster and gave each chick a few swallows each, no pun intended a few swallows for the Swallows!! When Cory came back he had a out 20 hoppers and I explained to him how these kinds of birds are insects that were caught in mid flight, hoppers, dragonflies, damselflies, beetles, moths, but mostly flies and mosquitoes. But we would have to make do with the hoppers, minus the heads and hind legs and that he would have to feed them every hour and a half minimum, so we used up the hoppers and a couple hours later just before dark I told him he had to go get at least 50 hoppers before bed and to his credit he came back in 20 minutes or so with about 150 of them and actually set his little alarm clock and got up every hour and 15 minutes to feed them. 3 days later one died, it had recieved a head injury from its fall. I showed Cory how to take dried grass and mix it with shredded paper for clean nesting and he would change out the old and take a warm slightly damp sponge and clean the babies litter butts and faces. 4 weeks later they were fully formed and were doing little flights around his room and sitting on his lampshade staring outside, they would come land on you at feeding time and at night they went into their box. One day we took the box into the garage and left it there on top of my Jeep and before we could even make it to the door one flew out of the box, circled us chirping and then flew out of the garage into the cloud of other Swallows their same age that had also recently fledged. The next morning out of 7 birds there was 2 left that Cory continued to feed and 2 days later they were gone also. A year later when the swallows came back in the spring my friend Jonathan and I were in the garage when a couple swallows came in circling and chirping before flying back out, and one pair of Swallows did not make its nest on the big old school building, they made it on the outside wall of my sons Room, almost exactly where there box set inside when they were babies. They nested there 3 years in a row the only ones out of 1000's of mud swallows that didnt next at the school 3 blocks away!! It was a fascinating experience and my son learned much about the sacredness and fragility of life from it!!

stevenhall
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Amazing. Beautiful that you brought him up and I have to say: starlings are one of my favourite birds 🐦 😍

a.wilkins
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Last spring 2021, my wife and I found a baby robin laying on our porch. The two oldest ones had pushed it out of the nest; it had no feathers. My wife took it in and made a warm nest for it, and we bought worms to feed it. We started out with small red wigglers and gently put them in its beak far enough that it could swallow them. Anyway, after 2 or 3 weeks, feeding it every couple of hours, it grew feathers. When the other two left the nest, we set ours down in the same area the parents were feeding them, and then would bring it back in at night and be sure it was fed. After about 3 days the parents took over and finished raising it and taught it to find food. We were thrilled that the parents took it back.

markjennette
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Thank you for helping this bird!! He wouldn't have made if it wasn't for you

michellesouders
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Good afternoons to all from SE Louisiana 19 Feb 22.

billmorris
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Such an amazing story. God bless you and clinger🪶🪶🪶

deannemaryealmeida
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I love 💕💕 it greetings from North East India 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳

Tomba-ul