Great idea...why don't we cut all the F/N trees down..... that will work....:doh::doh::doh:Cut the tree down
Kind of a drama queen aren't you? I said cut 1 tree down. You can plant 2 more in your pants to make up for itGreat idea...why don't we cut all the F/N trees down..... that will work....:doh::doh::doh:
Hi,
I was wondering if anyone had any advice for getting rid of a crow that has made a nest in a big elm tree in my front yard. it is very noisy and keeps the song birds away. I need some suggestions on how to go about this in an urban setting. I specify urban because the easy way, if was not within city limits, would be to shoot it and then leave its body on the roof or in the tree. Crows are smart and other crows would then stay away from the danger. Unfortunately the City of Winnipeg and the Police take a dim view of one discharging firearms or air rifles within the city limits.
Add to that my 16 year old daughter making me promise I won't hurt the crow.
My next plan is to get out the garden hose and continually hose it down but it is so high up (~40-50 feet) I may not be able to reach t with a garden hose.
I'm also thinking of hiring an arborist with tree climbing experience to go up and destroy it but I'm concerned it would just come back.
Cheers
How can I get rid of crows from my yard?*
First off, I urge you to reconsider.* Yes they can be noisy, and get into things, and cause mischief.* But I assure you, you will not find another urban animal so charismatic, so intelligent and so accessible to explore avian behavior, cognition and biology.* However, if you’re dead-set on the idea…you’re still mostly out of luck.* You can hang a dead crow from a tree but that’s about it.* Remember: poisons and ammo will hurt not only the crows you’re targeting but also the other wildlife you may be trying to attract.* My advice is to open yourself to the idea of actually liking crows and get to the know the family, because it is a distinct family, that will*stay with you for years if you allow.
https://corvidresearch.wordpress.com/faqs-about-crows/#crow-gone
Work by Dr. John Marzluff and his collaborators in Seattle demonstrates that wild American crows can and do recognize human faces, acting on their memories of prior interactions with these people. Furthermore, their work shows that individual crows act on information they receive about these people even if in the absence of direct experience; in other words, they act based on what other crows have communicated to them about these particular people.*
The implications of these results, while consistent with my and a great many others’ experience, are unsettling to our culturally ingrained anthropocentric views of the world. What does it mean if the wild creatures around us know us as individuals and respond to our behavior, telling each other whether we are generous (offering food) or dangerous (likely to trap or shoot)? Certainly it upends the idea that we are more sophisticated in our knowledge of them than they are of us. The only way I can recognize a crow is if that bird is banded or perhaps has white feathers or an injury; the crows seem to have no problem recognizing me without my wearing any sort of tags.
The work of Marzluff and colleagues looks specifically at the relationship between humans and crows in urban areas. As the type of ecosystem most profoundly impacted by anthropic forces, urban areas can provide us with a clear sense of how human behavior affects the behavior of other species. Human behavior within these ecosystems is a force of natural selection; individuals better able to perceive and predict human behavior are more likely to survive, thrive, and reproduce than individuals less ability to interpret human behavior.*Therefore, over time, urban areas might be expected to be host to ever increasing numbers of other animals all able to know us, and predict what we will do next.
It is only recently that scientists have started studying the ecology of the city, despite the urban environment’s likely unique impacts on biodiversity. Our ignorance of the way the city functions as an ecological and evolutionary system fosters our lack of awareness of the complex and dynamic responses of other species to our presence. Crows are an urban opportunist and do well in areas affected by people. While this might at first seem a reason to focus our attention towards species that are threatened or endangered, understanding how they respond to the behavior of humans can provide us a sense of the ways human activities potentially affect the behavior of other corvids, other birds, and other urban animal species in general. Also, insight into the world of the birds that live right next door to us serves to deeply enrichen our own experience of the city.
In their work to document facial recognition and behavioral response in crows, the Marzluff lab focused on exploring the relationship between trapping a crow and being recognized (and mobbed) later by that crow. To do this, researchers wore caveman masks while trapping, banding and releasing crows on the UW campus. Later, other students put on the masks and walked the campus, taking notes on crow behavior. A control mask, Dick Cheney, was also worn by people walking around the campus. Banded and unbanded crows responded by scolding anyone wearing the caveman mask while, at the same time, ignoring the Dick Cheney mask. Future masks were created to be more lifelike, based on actual individual people rather than caricatures, and the results were the same. Crows recognize human faces. They even recognize them when the mask is upside down.
Over several years of data collection, it became clear that information about dangerous humans was passing both horizontally among adult crows and vertically between adults and their fledgling young. Unbanded adults who had never been trapped scolded mask-wearing individuals. Fledglings watched their parents scold and later scolded those faces they now recognized as a threat themselves. This community-wide recognition lasts. Crows were still responding aggressively to the dangerous masks more than two and a half years after the original birds were captured.*
While crows in different regions of Washington showed the ability to recognize people, the level of response they exhibit appears to depend on whether humans are more or less generally threatening.* Crows in urban Seattle, where they are generally tolerated, show a greater level of aggressiveness toward people wearing threatening masks, than do crows in a relatively rural Washington site bordered by areas where crows are regularly hunted.
For all of these birds, it is likely that a very specific neurosensory pathway directs their perception of these faces. Marzluff and Colleagues at UW School of Medicine used positron emission tomography scans (PET scans) to determine the brain activity of crows exposed to threatening and caring masks.* They discovered that in crows the response to the vision of a threatening face is translated through a very specific neurosensory pathway; this pathway is different than that activated by a caring face (the mask worn by those who fed the crows while they were in captivity for the study).
While the research on recognition and aversion is now extensive, there has been less research into the relationship between caring behavior and crow recognition and cultural communication. However, there are a number of anecdotes of crows recognizing people with whom they have positive interactions, not least of which are the gifts that people, such as Gabi Mann, receive from these birds. Marzluff, in the book he co-wrote with the artist Tony Angell,*Gifts of the Crow, documents these episodes of apparent gifting behavior, from the delivery of a candy heart to a necklace bead to a key.*
In examining the incidents of gifting, Marzluff and Angel conclude that “gifting is real.”* They also note the two hypothesis that might explain this behavior; one is that it is accidental. A crow may be carrying an object and drop it in order to pick of up a higher value food item. Alternatively, gifting is intentional. Crows give gifts to people for the same reasons people give gifts to each other, as a form of connection and reciprocity. This is the hypothesis that drives the internet excitement over Gabi Mann’s gifts. It is an awesome thing to imagine that the crows are acting to connect with us. However, the implication of this level of recognition and intentional interaction between wild birds and humans is also profound.
This work with crows is extensive and progresses hand in hand with the study of corvid cognition. To some extent, the ability of various corvid species to recognize humans is less surprising since we know that corvids are complex social beings with, at least in some species, the ability to create and use tools. They are, however, not the only wild avian species to recognize human faces. Wild Northern mockingbirds recognize potentially threatening people. Pigeons recognize the faces of people who feed them and know, based on past experience, whether that human is more or less likely to bother them while they are eating. It seems the crows who know us are just the tip of the iceberg in the urban ecosystem; our perception of existing in our isolated human biome, assuming only our pets know us, is one likely to crumble as we learn more about how the species we engage with every day know us and change their behavior to respond to us.
http://voicesforbiodiversity.org/articles/the-crow-that-knows-us
find a dead crow somewhere and hang it as close to the nest as possible and harrase the shit outta them ...theyw ill feel unsafe and leave.
dont let them lay eggs and have babies.... we all know how annoying the cry of baby crows is for 5 months.
find a spot where u can get a shot with a webly pellet gun that is inside a room and shoot out a window.... everytime they land in tree , blast them !!!
you must be ever pressistant. you will win !![]()
wow , your a true Troll..... where are the mods?Bit of a douchebag, aren't we? Someone forgot to tell you it's 2015, not 1915? It's your kind of mix between arrogant, ignorant and power hungry attitude that's responsible for the fucking mess this planet's in and the serious shit the generations that come after you are going to be kicked in the ass with.
What an ugly, pathetic display of human hubris. I don't know how people can seriously believe in humans' superiority when people like you provide the proof that it's the opposite. Nothing superior in that kind of vile bs.
That crow is 10 times the person you are. Sick fuck.
You guys go ahead and get mad at me for my attitude or language all you want. But im not the one getting a huge hardon from killing and tormenting birds that are barely the size of my head and aren't doing anything to me ffs. So want to get mad at me? Check your priorities!
What a tough guy with his pellet gun.. .
Like I said: shot in both butt cheeks.
Crows actually hate owls to the point where crows will congregate to attack them, so that approach might backfire. Fake owl works for pigeons and seagulls though.I think a fake owl keeps them at bay too
. Fake owl works for pigeons
not always.I bought a fake owl to try to discourage pigeons from perching on my balcony.woke up one morning,looked out the window,a pigeon was talking to his new friend
the owl,wondering why there was no response,lol.
i never pass by a dead crow on the side of the road...i have picked up a couple in past few years.I was wondering if mil was posting tongue-in-cheek to stir things up?if so, I'd say he succeeded.
I also wondered where would you look for a dead crow?
I can relate to their intelligence from my experiences with magpies,part of the crow family.
I lived in Sydney,Aus for a few yrs late 90's.4 of us rented a house in North Sydney.The landlord had told us of magpies in the back yard
that were "raucous,but fun."
Very true statement.the 1st morning I was having a coffee on the back patio,2 magpies flew down,landed just beyond arm's length, and started
"talking" to me...bold as Billy-be-damned!it seemed like they were saying I was on their turf&they wanted something,lol.
I got them a bowl with blueberries&they got stuck into it.
that evening,or the next, we used the backyard bbq& the 2 magpies showed up, more talk,maybe "medium rare for me" I dunno,but we
quickly learned they were NOT vegetarian.
I can't say about other countries but magpies in Oz are extremely protective of their nests.I actually saw a 20ish girl get chased and pecked on the head by
a over-protective nesting mother magpie.
Every yr ppl get treated for scalp wounds like this..maybe Alfred H. got his inspiration for The Birds here?
It's true that they recognize ppl.They knew us and didn't bother us,except to come around scrounging food,which wasn't a bother,it was fun.
But anybody approaching our back door entrance would get swooped,nesting season or not.
I got quite attached to the cheeky buggers.
I was wondering if mil was posting tongue-in-cheek to stir things up?if so, I'd say he succeeded.
I also wondered where would you look for a dead crow?
I can relate to their intelligence from my experiences with magpies,part of the crow family.
I lived in Sydney,Aus for a few yrs late 90's.4 of us rented a house in North Sydney.The landlord had told us of magpies in the back yard
that were "raucous,but fun."
Very true statement.the 1st morning I was having a coffee on the back patio,2 magpies flew down,landed just beyond arm's length, and started
"talking" to me...bold as Billy-be-damned!it seemed like they were saying I was on their turf&they wanted something,lol.
I got them a bowl with blueberries&they got stuck into it.
that evening,or the next, we used the backyard bbq& the 2 magpies showed up, more talk,maybe "medium rare for me" I dunno,but we
quickly learned they were NOT vegetarian.
I can't say about other countries but magpies in Oz are extremely protective of their nests.I actually saw a 20ish girl get chased and pecked on the head by
a over-protective nesting mother magpie.
Every yr ppl get treated for scalp wounds like this..maybe Alfred H. got his inspiration for The Birds here?
It's true that they recognize ppl.They knew us and didn't bother us,except to come around scrounging food,which wasn't a bother,it was fun.
But anybody approaching our back door entrance would get swooped,nesting season or not.
I got quite attached to the cheeky buggers.
One of Farley Mowat’s many classic books, A Whale for the Killing, written in1972, was an autobiographical account of his moving to Newfoundland because of his love for the land and the sea, only to find himself at odds with herring fishermen who made sport of shooting at an 80-ton fin whale trapped in a lagoon by the tide. Although he had started off thinking folks around there were a quaint and pleasant lot, he grew increasingly bitter over the attitudes of so many of the locals who, in turn, resented him for “interfering” by trying to save the stranded leviathan.
Mr. Mowat writes, “My journal notes reflect my sense of bewilderment and loss. ‘…they’re essentially good people. I know that, but what sickens me is their simple failure to resist the impulse of savagery…they seem to be just as capable of being utterly loathsome as the bastards from the cities with their high-powered rifles and telescopic sights and their mindless compulsion to slaughter everything alive, from squirrels to elephants…I admired them so much because I saw them as a natural people, living in at least some degree of harmony with the natural world. Now they seem nauseatingly anxious to renounce all that and throw themselves into the stinking quagmire of our society which has perverted everything natural within itself, and is now busy destroying everything natural outside itself. How can they be so bloody stupid? How could*I*have been so bloody stupid?’”
Farley Mowat ends the chapter with another line I can well relate to: “I had withdrawn my compassion from them…now I bestowed it all upon the whale.”





