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I have a good friend that has an animal sanctuary. She gets lots of animals and many birds every spring but she once got a baby magpie come in. She used to carry this baby magpie in her hoodie, wearing the hoodie backwards so the hood was at the front. She was always talking to him and he always talked back. They are great mimics and can make all kinds of sounds. They were always together except at night when she put him in a safe place to sleep. This little magpie was incredibly smart, even as a youngster. My friend and this magpie were inseparable and there was clearly a great bond and much love between them. When he grew up to be an adult, strong and healthy she knew the time had come to let him have his freedom. She knew when that time came when he started watching other magpies flying about in the garden. She let him fly but he kept coming back. She kept taking him back but also let him have access to the garden. One day he left and did not come back. Even though this was a success story for a rehabilitator, she was completely crushed. She missed him horribly. About a month later he showed up with a lady magpie. He introduced his new wife then they left. Soon after they had baby magpies and the whole family would come to visit her. This happened a few ago and he continues to visit her regularly.
I was privileged to share my home with a magpie for 10 plus years. Totally imprinted. Not by me. She talked as well as our African Grey. In two little girls voices. I can still hear "Mommie come here !! Right NOW" LoL She got into everything. Had a stash of "stuff" under the potpourri in a Roseville pottery dish. At least once a week she would throw the potpourri everywhere. Line up all her treasure's and check them out. Then put them back. Put a couple of pieces of the potpourri over and fly off. Leaving me to clean up the mess. She was a total joy.
I had a pair of magpies nesting in a tree outside where I used to live. One of them is easy to recognize because it's missing a part of its foot. I called it Stumpy and it's partner I called Crash. I would often lay out food for them when they had chicks and during winter and if I was late on some days with food, they'd come knocking on my window, it got to the point where they'd take food out of my hand or respond if I whistled for them. One year, they only had one chick and one morning, Crash came tapping at my widow but didn't want any food. Crash kept flying to a certain place in the garden, where Stumpy was sitting and back again so I went to investigate and found one of the chicks, unfortunatly, dead. I took the chick and went to bury it in a secluded spot and the entire time, while I was carrying the chick and digging the hole to bury it, they sat next to the dead chick. After I had buried it, they would sometimes sit by the grave or bring little pebbles or tiny twigs or even leave bits of food I gave them. It was very unusual but it was clear they were feeling a very certain way about their loss. I had to move this year and the landlord, a lovely old lady who loves birds, promised she would keep feeding them. I moved about 10 minutes away and about a week after I moved, I woke up to a loud bang outside on my porch. I looked outside my window and there they were, Stumpy and Crash, chattering away like there was no tomorrow amongs a broken pot of growing strawberries. Either they accidentally or intentionally found me but I was still so happy to see them. They come by from time to time even now.
My Dad loved nature & birds, the day he died a Magpie flew around me constantly, I was outside making calls about my Dads passing, I was watching it, smiling x I’d always thought they were striking looking birds but never been near one. The next day one perched very close to me, I felt it knew I knew that was a hello from my Dad ♥️. It still happens that was 11 yrs ago.
There’s a family of magpies at my local park. I think it’s a bunch of first years and some parents. I saw that one of them that died about a month ago, and the whole family was mourning its death in a kind of ritual. They are most definitely very intelligent. As I wrote this at the same park, I watched them not five minutes ago play around with a rabbit, pestering it and chasing it around for a time. Then they got bored and went to looking for food, and the rabbit came back and they’re all foraging through the grass together. Nature truly is a marvel.
On may 18, when returning from work, I saw a single magpie on the side of the road, was starving, I did not salute him but I opened my palms and he jumped on them, I took him home, now is on my shoulder picking my earlobe. Please add to the list: 1. They are capable of love and affection! 2. They know their name 3. They will protect your chair if you have guests (they will swoosh and hit them) 4. They shit allot, much more if they are afraid, (I call it panik mode). 5. They don't shit on your head (like seen in a video involving the son of a celebrity) 6. They are lot smaller than it seems (you can see it after they take a bath) 7. If they do something bad and you scold them, it will retreat somewhere and start arguing with themselves. 8. If you leave the house, they will fly away to a high place then follow you, if you leave with the car, you can find them waiting on the highest place near your home when you return.
A year ago, my wife and I helped a young fledgling magpie that was on the footpath opposite our house. I could see two other magpies with it but the one in question had lots of downy feathers and appeared injured, at least, unable to take flight. We were concerned in could easily fall prey to any of several cats that patrol our area, so we brought it back to our house and called an animal/bird sanctuary. All during this time, one of the other magpies perched on electrical wires behind our house, observing everything. In the end, we took the young magpie to a large bush in our garden and after climbing a ladder with it in hand, we were able to get it on top of the foliage. We didn’t see it fly away but we checked the bush later and found no sign of it or the other magpie that had been watching us. Now a year later, a solitary magpie comes to the cherry tree in our garden. I am often sitting outside and it comes very close, not frightened or disturbed if I get up to walk closer. I spoke to it, as I had when reassuring the other fledgling a year ago and on two occasions it came onto the ground and hopped a little closer. It flies off if I get too close but I am convinced this is ‘our’ young magpie we helped a year ago.
ron donnis - I am quite insulted by your insinuation! It is NOT imagination, it actually happened and the magpie (if it is the one we helped) is still visiting our garden. It may be a different one of course. It did again yesterday evening. If you can’t trust me to tell the truth, you should look at yourself and ask yourself why you’re so cynical. I can’t abide lies and deceit - maybe that is something you know too much about. If that’s the case, I feel sorry for you but not everyone in your life will lie to you. I didn’t.
@@magnificentmuttley2084 I believe you. They are the smartest birds alive. I've had a few for pets and they have never ceased to amaze me. They make the most perfect pets. They are hilarious and good as having a pet dog.
@@gyongyipedersen9264 To be fair it hardly happened so wasn't a problem. Maybe because they had the run of both the inside and outside. I do remember the magpie sitting in my exercycle handle bars a bit and we did had the odd accident on that.
My aunt found a baby Magpie under a tree ( it had fallen from the nest ) she took that magpie home 15 years ago and now my aunt has passed away and Maggie the Magpie is still alive living with her son ( my cousin) they are amazing birds and I love having little Maggie as a part of the family lol
I love magpies! It started when I was a child (72 now) and my brothers brought one back from the woods which had fallen from the nest, he used to talk and follow my mother around and call her Betty, he would peck our toes so we would hurry up and put our socks and shoes on for school, he would go out the garden and come in when he wanted, he lived with us for years one day he went off and never came home, we were told he had found a mate and got married. Lovely memories 🏴
I had a Crow I rescued as a baby nestling who had been taken by a Hawk & dropped apparently, according to the witnesses who brought him to me. He had a badly ravaged wing and I didnt think he would survive but I got plenty of fluids & protein into him & nursed him through it all , even taught him to fly! and Nev chose to return & live with me for the next 3yrs despite our several attempts at releasing him back into the local population. He was an extremely intelligent & affectionate creature & I grew to love him very much . I adored his quirky character, his love of water and bathing constantly , they are very misundersood & maligned birds people dont give them enough credit, they are fussy & clean & even dunk their food in water if they can, he shared his food also with his friends who would visit him , he would take pieces of meat or nuts & fruits out of his bowls up on his stand , would fly to the edge of the balcony and drop them over the side for the others to swoop down and retrieve. He has emptied his bowls numerous times doing that and the local Crows & pigeons still visit. I miss him very much still 4 years on. He lived indoors with me and yes his pooping was a constant problem, ...they are not to be considered as pets, especially as babies they poop a lot! ...my home was draped in old sheets, towels and curtains for 2yrs until he finally adapted to using the outside parrot stand I bought him for on my balcony. I realised he poops when he eats & drinks so I bought a big set up where he could eat and poop into a tray I lined. He would climb up the ladders to the very top and sit there with his food bowls beside him , watching down over the gardens of the houses beside us & the town below, while his Crow friends would come perch on the nearby rooftops and visit & caw with him. He was very territorial and never flew farther than where he could see the balcony from. His wing was not strong and he needed to fly from a height ,once grounded he could not lift off to any great height alone...instead he ran around with my two dogs & thought he was a dog im sure! He had no fear of them ever, & would run at them , hiss or yell at them, firmly putting them in their place if they tried to rough play or took his toys, we were a very happy family. I lost him in our 3rd year together when he was a big glossy beauty & loving his life. He flew down one 4.30 am morning as per our usual routine to see off my partner for work. I would let him exercise with the dogs and then place him up on a high wall from where he could lift himself to fly amongst the low trees there below my balcony until he would caw loudly for me to come get him. He never called for me that morning & we never saw him again. A short while later just after 5am a neighbour of ours, who was pretty obsessed with Nev and with whom id had a previous incident, knocked on my door telling me some wild tale about seeing Nev on a road he would never be able to get to...this person was later on the same day admitted into a mental health unit, having given us different rambling stories , so I believe they did something to Nev that morning & in their intoxicated confusion decided to come tell me they saw him far away so i would think he just flew off. Very sad 😔 I have wonderful videos & pics of him on my youtube channel here if anybody would like to see Nev as a baby.
@@joecampbell6486 Thank you yes it was devastating. He was such a good & gentle creature he did not deserve the hard life he had...but thankfully he had me & I tried hard to make him happy in his too short life.
in around 1980 when living in the country around Glastonbury we came across a featherless bird on the side of the road. We took it home and i squashed up worms which we fed to him with tweezers. He survived the first night and got bigger and bigger and eventually once he developed feathers we could tell he was a magpie. He out grew his box so we made a run, which he out grew. Eventually i realised he needed to fly so we h let him go free but he stayed with us. He would fly away but come back and settle on my shoulder, He ate anything and everything. Maggot as we called him was very territorial and attacked anyone who came through the gate. After 6 months or so we released him on top of the mendips in the forest by the TV mast. We went back a week later and we were in a clearing. Maggot came flying down and landed on my shoulder just like he always did. He looked very happy. I often think of how many little maggots he was a dad too. Beautiful bird, full of character
@@paulablakeborough9404 I adore all birds Paula but magpies are close to my favourite i guess for their cheeky behaviour. I am lucky enough to have sparrows visiting our bird table and the constant chirp chirp is one of natures joys. Glad you like my memory of Maggot.
The magpie is my dad ❤ when he died, unexpectedly, in 2020 during Covid I decided that my dad was the magpie that came to my garden at the time of his death. I am from South Shields, we support Newcastle United, we are The Mags… ironically, I live in Leicestershire and see more Magpies here than I ever saw in South Shields … I love corvid birds all of them beautiful, just like my dad ❤
Wow your story is so similar to mine I got goosebumps! Every time I see a solo magpie I do the traditional salute and blow a kiss and say I love you into the air for my pops to catch! My grandparents kept a magpie and it fascinated me as a child, the morning after my pops passed (😢April 2020 but not covid related) I had a visit from 3 very noisy magpies in my garden and I truly believe it was my grandparents bringing my pops to let me know they were all together again and no one will ever tell me different ❤
I raised one that my dog rescued as it fell out of a nest. It ate with the dog from its bowl and picked out all the best tidbits. It rode on the back of my dog. It greeted me after school and it went to bed by itself in a makeshift open basket as a cage. I loved him or her until one day there was another magpie on the other side of the fence. They cackled to each other and one day they took off together, never to be seen again. I will never forget my clever little friend. Suffice to say that I love these birds. 😊❤😊
I’m a 65 year old man in central Scotland. I never saw a magpie until my 20’s. Now, I see them every day. Must have discovered the greatness of Scotland eventually. Great vid. Subbed.
Hi eddie.first of all 65 is young lol.and your in scottland.what a beautiful place.im traveling there for work in sept.so maybe il see many birds.and other unique.anamals.have a. Great day.
Thank you for this video and thank you for writing the text. As a german guy it is difficult to follow the spoken words, especially when music is in the background (which wasn´t too bad). We found a little magpie under our tree four weeks ago. We took it in our house and cared for it. The intelligence was just stunning. The little bird grew fast, learned to fly and - sad to say - left us after three weeks. The relatives monitored every movement of their child and requested to have it back. But when we left it alone in the garden, they did not come to feed. So we continued feeding it and now it is back with its family, sometimes greeting us from a tree. We are happy about that but we miss it. It was such a sweet baby. The nest in our tree is still there and we hope it will come back making some new little maggies.
Brilliant story. I would love to include the script all the time but I believe you can use the youtube subtitles function which would help you to follow along as I'm speaking?
I love magpies, I rescued two in the past and they are so smart, huge satisfaction watching them become independent and go live with their wild counterparts.
This video made me smile. Recently I have one of my chimneys cleared out by chimney sweeps who took away 5 large bin bags of twigs and other nesting materials. I wanted to have a fire to save on fuel. I only had time to have one because they returned and yesterday I counted 5 on my lawn after the bird food i had distributed. They are now back in the chimney and I am collected umpteen twigs daily from the hearth and hearing sweet little tweets in the early evening. They are very considerate though because they keep quiet while I am watching TV.
Hi Gladys. Im glad you enjoyed the video and hope you can continue to enjoy the others on this channel. It does sound like they have chosen your chimney and wont stop until you accept them as house mates. But it could be worse, at least they stay quiet whilst the TV is on! Cheers.
I have befriended the local magpie couple in my garden, every morning I put out two pecans on my windowsill, I wait a couple of minutes, and they come to collect them. I close the blinds slightly so they don't get too worried about me, but I can watch them really up close, they are just incredibly beautiful! And so smart, it only took a couple of mornings before they started anticipating the nuts being there for them every day. The couple are very easy to spot because the male has a 'dropped' wing that doesn't fold in properly, he does very well though and it doesn't seem to worry him.
Talking about their intelligence I have a water bowl at my feeding station one day there was a pigeon eating the food and the Magpie didn't want to wait and proceeded to splash it till it left. These are one of my favourite birds.
I have always loved magpies! They add so much to the Swedish winter landscape. Their colouring is lovely. In Sweden, having a magpie-nest on your farm brings good luck, and I always hope they'll build their enormous, messy nests in one of my trees: once they start, they just build onto the old nest, and you get a lovely piece of post-modern architecture!
Magpies on a farm are a pest as they take as many eggs and young ones of any game or songbirds they can relentlessly route out,that's why most conscientious farmers cull them
Hello blixten.thats a lovely way at looking at nature. Like you i always see the beauty in the world.i back onto a very deep forest so i see so much nature and many birds and animals.i watch all day long lol.nice to hear others loving art and nature.have a wonderful day from canada🌟✨😀🐭🐺🐶🐱🐰🐹🐦🐔
Many yrs ago, due 2 take final Nursing exam, in basement of old Nurses Home we kept bikes. Magpie trapped btwn bikes so gently spoke/held him,, opened window + released him. Magpie stood, about 4 minutes, looking @ me up + down, then flew off! Later, I sat exam + Thank GOD I PASSED exam, Magpies r my favourite birds!! Jill ✅
Fantastic vid...we feed magpies/other crows/jays/herring gulls/pigeons/sparrows several times every day with a combination of watered bread, mixed seed and high protein food such as scraps of fatty food like chicken, sausage pork or whatever else we may have to hand...ensure they never go hungry, particularly at this time of year. We also have two resident squirrels we feed with monkey nuts which disappear in minutes. We also feed several resident foxes every night with watered dog biscuits, tinned dog food and any other scraps we may have....they love raw eggs when we have them. On top of this, we have an insulated, illuminated and heated large aviary at the end of our garden where we house and feed 4 rescue cockatiels from Raystede with bread/mixed seed and lettuce, which they love three times a day. Finally, we have a beautiful 16 year old Shi'tzu/Cavalier dog, Bobby we have had since he was a puppy...he eats like a horse and just loves baked liver and sausages along with Cesar dog food. I barely have time to feed myself! Bob, Hove
I have a Pair come to my back garden and i feel kinda special now after watching and learning from this video. I am so happy to know that I could be helping to extend their lifespan by feeding them. We need to re-educate people to take away the superstition attatchéd to them. Many would become as fascinated as I was, after learning of their astounding intelligence and other traits.
Objections are not superstitions but the need and desire to curb their nasty aggressive ways that are damaging to other species. The more you feed them and enable them to breed and breed, the fewer songbirds we will have, The longer they live, the same
Love them. When 1st moved to the UK I didn't know bird names and all that. I just thought I really like these birds and when I'd point them out to people they'd say "you like pies????" As if I was crazy. Then I became crazy about birds and I really don't like the negativity about them. They're wonderful birds.
I love magpies too. They are smart and they are funny. They also have a great gait and walk like they own the world, a real strut if I ever saw one. Where I used to live I had a field full of magpies behind me, one day I counted 13. Good job I’m not _very_ superstitious.
Try & learn about what they do naturally. Nest robbers of both eggs & chicks. That's why in the countryside they get heavily controlled. My cousin has been controlling a farm in Hertfordshire & the song bird population numbers have gone up, even the farmer commented on the songbird numbers. He accounted in the first year to over 100 magpies, & there are still magpies around. Its good to have a general license so you can control some pests.
I've got a magpie nest in my garden this year ! First time ever. It's at the top of a tall holly tree. They've got three youngsters, and the five of them keep me entertained with their antics everytime I look out of the window ! I love magpies. 😍
I was watching my dog chew on a bone in our back garden. I was amused to see two Magpies work together to get the bone off my dog. One would jump around causing a commotion by the bone whilst the other one went behind my dog and pecked at his tail. Sure enough when the dog turned around to bite the tail pecking Magpie, the other one stole the bone. Very clever.
I currently have a family of six magpies in and around my garden. The couple have been successful at breeding for several years. I enjoy their antics and, when I put out mealworms in the feeders for the small garden birds, I throw a handful on the ground for them. They are very social and I am happy to encourage them. Garden birds are a treasure, cherish them.
We found a baby magpie that had fallen out of the nest. We took care of him until he was able to fly. He would come and go and then one day he didn't come back. He was a very intelligent bird and I will always remember all of his antics.
After a year of feeding and talking to magpies and crows as they landed in my small garden two of the magpies have finally came down near my feet to get some mealworms.They make their friendly cracking noise while on the fence when I call them hello maggypie! They are so clever! I also have 3 related jackdaws that come down as well,amazing!
I have been lucky enough to see a pair build there nest and it took them about three weeks carrying sticks two foot long and breaking them up. All day they would do this i was amazed at how dedicated they were. Two fledglings hatched and there parents are teaching them to fly love watching them now i feel like i am as happy as there parents they survived.
Over the past 2 years we've had less Magpies than usual with the result we have more songbirds again. The dawn chorus is a sound to behold at the moment with cheeping from the small birds and the Blackbirds and their beautiful song plus many more. Gives me the feel good factor.
When a Ewe is pregnant, sometimes it can roll over onto its back, because the back is wide and the lamb/s is heavy it cannot recover. If a Magpie spots it, he will fly down and take the eyes to eat. Also they search hedges and trees looking for nests with young or eggs, I very often find beautifully woven nests on the floor. So I shoot as many Magpies as I can.
People think these are lovely birds. They are not, they kill numerous small birds and their young, like you said, the will take the eyes of new born lambs and sometimes even calves. Along with crows they ard the scourge of the countryside
Fool playing God ! Perhaps if you went to school when you were young you would have been told about nature, you should have your gun take away from you by the authorities, !
While in Baghdad, Iraq these birds impressed me profoundly. We had one stop us on the street once and when we tried to walk around it the bird met our every step with loud screeches and physical interference to our attempts to ignore it. Finally my friend said, “Let me see your bottle of water”. I handed it to him and he started to remove the cap and the bird went screwy. It was jumping and squawking like it was nuts. Patrick bent over and fed the water to the thirsty bird. From high on its perch atop a pole it had spotted us with me holding that water bottle and flew down at us interrupting our advance in order to persuade us to give it some water. It was uncanny. I will never forget that as long as I live.
These birds are very intelligent and are great team workers. I do not like them though as they bully and are destructive in their nature. I have observed them pulling out and throwing freshly planted onions and throwing other birds young out of nests without eating them. My cat mimics magpie noises to attract them in to catch them. I was amazed to see this for the first time.
I love Magpies and have a had a breeding pair at the bottom of my garden for the last 8 years. A farmer friend once told me that more than one pair per 25 acres is too many, as they will predate on other birds. I enjoy capturing them in flight, especially when the sunlight brings out their true colours.
My special babies! There are loads where I live, a pair of them come and hop around in the garden every day. They're so pretty and shiny! And so cheeky looking
I have befriended a pair of magpies that live in the trees around my home. They’ve been here as long as i have 17years this year! I have a small garden which attracts a lot of birds and one or two cats who like basking on a bench beneath some trees. The magpies keep watch for the cats and sound the alarm for the other birds and to let me know the cats are in the garden! So pleased i found your channel - i,m fascinated by my bird friends. I walked to the tube station and was waiting on the platform on a nice day last week it was as if the crows, magpies and wood pigeons had followed me. They fly very close to me when i am out walking almost as if to say hi. 🐦⬛
I used to believe in the superstitions but not any more. I find just as much Joy from seeing 1 magpie as I do with 2. They have always been my favourite bird and they always will be ❤️
Thanks for the vid. My cat quite appreciated it. Everyday I open my patio window and a magpie sits on my patio chair and natters at my cat.... my cat listens for a while... magpie gets quiet... and she natters back at him chirping like a bird. The magpie listens for a while and flies off. Every single day this keeps happening.
Cheers! They are very smart so perhaps by waiting for the cat to respond the magpie is ensuring where it is. Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment.
There's a pair of magpies in our garden. I call them Magnus and Marion. Magnus has been here since he was a young bird he isn't tame, but he is very bold and relaxed. We had an elderly cat Houdini, that was outside most of last summer and who we feed outside. Magnus would come right up and feed from the side of of the bowl alongside our cat! Magnus would defend the bowl from neighbouring or passing cats. Since Houdini died I still put food out for Magnus a couple of times a week. He will come tap on the conservatory or hop about calling under the kitchen window and ask for it. He seemed to mourn Houdini for a number of week when he died. The cat was buried in the garden and Magnus would fuss about the area where he was buried and pile twigs and leaves up there for several weeks. Marion and he are nested in our Garden this year, but nearly lost their young to a young Raven. They valiantly defended there nest though and one of the brood survived and has fledged.
@@AShotOfWildlife I’m in the us in idaho to be exact and the magpies here that I’ve seen look exactly like the ones in this video!!! Magpies are my favorite land animal!!
There are black-billed magpie (the one in usa also called american magpie) they look very similar to Eurasian magpie but they are not the same. All magpies are very intelligent and annoying birds.
I have two beautiful magpies that have come to visit regularly. One perhaps the male more frequently. My cat runs out excited to see him and very quietly just sits and watches. Mr Magpie has been bringing my cat little sticks and pieces of paper and drops it down off the patio railing for him. Kinda like a gift . I went out with a few selections of seeds and placed them on the railing post. He came by and garbled away as if to talk to me and thanked me for the food. He has become a regular and so very much enjoyed. He really sounds like he is trying very hard to have a conversation back when I gently talk to him .
I have a magpie nest in my willow tree and today I saw a baby magpie sitting on a branch with mum, sitting so close together they were almost touching. Wonderful.
A Willow tree?, very unusual for a Magpie to use a Willow tree to nest in. And have you ever wondered why they put a roof over the nest?. Probably so other birds like Carrion crows cant see the eggs & get to them. Because when the song birds are nesting Magpies make a living taking eggs & killing chicks. I have a small number of Magpies around me where i live, as soon as the numbers get higher out come the Larsen traps & rifle!!
Amazing but the magpies are again building a nest in the willow tree in my garden and others are nesting in the trees in the park next to me. Fascinating birds to watch, to see them sitting close together and, last year, to see them sit as a little family with their chicks. Nature means birds of different sizes destroy smaller ones and steal eggs, that's the cycle of life and death. To think of deliberately killing magpies is hideous and illegal. I hope you are reported and fined heavily.
One of my mother's neighbours had an elderly tomcat whose hearing wasn't that good anymore and I heard he was harassed by magpies eventhough I didn't personally witness it. I find jackdaws more annoying because they are more vocal and move in crowds, even if I don't feel that strongly about them either.
@@user3141592635 Got 2 magpie in my neighbourhood that throughout June n July actually escort the local cat home......And the cat does as it is told every time.
I’ve had 2 blackbirds in my garden for several years, the male always chase away the cats. I’ve seen it strait fly into the cat and make the cat run for it’s life.
Magpies attacked my cat in a,tree, he was so shocked i had to take him to the vets. When my cat went into the garden the magpies homed in on him to give him a peck. Still, i do love watching them.
I once had a Magpie enter an open bedroom window to steal something shiney on the window sill, it didn't know I was in the room as the curtain was closed, you can imagine the surprise it had when it realised I had seen it before helping it back outside. Lovely to see one up so close and hold one for a few seconds.
I used to keep getting coconut feeders taken from my bird feeder on a regular basis. One day I caught the culprit! A magpie! It’s meant coming up with more challenging ways of keeping feeders attached to the feeding station. For me it shows how we under estimate and under value the intelligence in the natural world!
@@islanddweller3674 still has to work out how to unhook it from the bird feeder. In other experiments crows have been presented with multiple stage puzzles to gain access to food. They succeed. That’s intelligence. Working out the stages required to gain access to a food reward.
Well not quite everything e.g. a pair decided to frequent our garden last year, and made know to all around their arrival. At first I was annoyed they came, but now 2 years later I have notice something about all the other birds in the garden. These magpies have changed the whole dynamics of the garden wildlife behaviour, including evicting the unwanted squirrels that nested in the same tree. That I don't mind, as the squires where often court sealing a whole fat ball. The Magpies also protect the feeders from the hordes of Crows and Jack doors, who can in one sitting completely empty all the feeders. Now everyone gets a look in. However this does not stop the Crows and particular the Jack doors from pestering the Magpies especially when they have young it seems. Plus our long garden leaves us with five neighbours two of which have cats. The Magpies act as an alarm when ever a cat enters our garden, and we like this, because the cats are always shitting in our veg beds, and or killing our birds. The pair have so far managed to fleg 2 young Magpies, but during the time when they are out of the nest and on the ground learning to fly, the adults took the alarm screech to another level, which meant of course we'd come and see what all the fuss is about! We now enjoy our Magpies and welcome to our garden. Great videos by the way, its good to learn off each other about our wildlife!
I have always said Good Morning Mr Magpie as far back as I can remember. They are regular visitors to our garden as we feed them along with the sparrows,robins ,wren, blackbirds, thrushes ,wood pigeons, collared doves and jackdaws.The jackdaws are the most nervous of them all.
In 2020, I went to the UK to give an exam ( the exam center was only based in the UK) and for the first time in my life I saw a magpie and I thought to my self what a beautiful bird ❤️ I passed my exam even though I saw a single magpie
Flapping your arms really works! I was very poor, living on the streets, when I saw a single magpie and flapped my arms. Now I'm very rich, no worry about anything. Amazing!
I used to have a magpie jackdaw pairing (presumably not a mating pair) who would fly down on to my balcony to eat dinner together every night, then fly off together. Was interesting behaviour!
We always say, "good morning/afternoon Mr Magpie, have a nice day". Just something we were taught as kids to ward off bad luck, and though I'm not superstitious, I still do it. 😁👍
Excellent stuff ! Corvids are amazing birds. Many people are quick to point out their 'bad's points, but the fact that in the wild they don't live many years although capable of living decades (especially ravens) shows how hard it is just to eek out a living - like us dying before our thirties.
@@Waseemmmm Corvids or corvidae is the scientific term for passerine birds. This genus include crows, magpies, jackdaws, ravens, jays, rooks, the list goes on.
@@Waseemmmm These are the ones I don't like to see too many of, as you will experience a decline in songbirds in your garden if there are too many around. It's the 'nature and the apex predator' issue.
i used to have my breacky on the roof in the nice weather, i lived in a observatory on top of a hill in the woods, a magpie would wait for me most mornings, i would feed it bits, it became quite tame, it would sit on the railings about a meter away, just watching me, it loved bacon rindes the best, there was a strange way with it, like it would look into my mind/heart, thats how it felt,good times, the simple things in life are free, ive always loved the wildlife, this just reminded me of long ago, thanks for sharing with us, love and contentment, Bobble&MrTao,xxx
In 1983, when on my new motorcycle, I witnessed the very tragic sight of a magpie which had been killed by a car, its body crushed by other vehicles, and its partner constantly flying down and away from the traffic to where the remains lay in the road. I knew they paired for life and was extremely saddened by the incident.
Yep , i saw the same behavior with indian mynahrs long ago . Tje implications just gotta change our whole frame of references. . However there's clearly been an evolutionary process since 1970s cos today we don't see mynahrs any more as road kill .
I have seen them attempt to rescue eachother from such situations. Abour three dragging an injured one to safety out of traffic but alas to no avail appeared to grieve around it
I have a small dog Emily, when she is outside sunning in the backyard. There is this Magpie who visits starts laughing or teasing Emily. She will bark at it and the Magpie will fly away.
We had a magpie who worked out that our cat was harmless and her food was put out in our conservatory. The door to the conservatory was open a small amount and some birds would get in and be unable to get out without help. The magpie was able to walk in, ignore the cat, eat her food and walk out again.
There's a pair of magpies in our garden. I call them Magnus and Marion. Magnus has been here since he was a young bird he isn't tame, but he is very bold and relaxed. We had an elderly cat Houdini, that was outside most of last summer and who we feed outside. Magnus would come right up and feed from the side of of the bowl alongside our cat! Magnus would defend the bowl from neighbouring or passing cats. Since Houdini died I still put food out for Magnus a couple of times a week. He will come tap on the conservatory or hop about calling under the kitchen window and ask for it. He seemed to mourn Houdini for a number of week when he died. The cat was buried in the garden and Magnus would fuss about the area where he was buried and pile twigs and leaves up there for several weeks. Marion and he are nested in our Garden this year, but nearly lost their young to a young Raven. They valiantly defended there nest though and one of the brood survived and has fledged.
This is great documentary 👏 . I learned what I wanted to know. Thank you. I started feeding magpies during lockdown. For start I had two magpies and one day I saw 10 of them in my garden 🙃 ...some of them were babies and I saw how babies were fed, was amazing to see... Now, every morning I love seeing them and they even waiting for me to come out.
Very informative. I have seen a few of your bird videos, respectfully may I make a suggestion? Have you considered adding a few examples of the call of the bird under description? I would find this very helpful, and am sure others viewers would also.
love your channel ,and love the Magpies ,I always salute a single Magpie if I see one and say Hi Mr. Magpie how's your wife and kids. I lived in Australia for years and migrated back to Cornwall 2 and a half years ago ,the Magpies in Oz have lovely singing voices. Finding your fabulous channel has helped me find out about the lovely birds, I also enjoyed your Robin ones...Many Blessings to you...
I adore Magpies. I have befriend a local pair for a year. Every morning I hand out some food to them. One morning I was early up, relaxing in the sofa, when I heard a new sound from one of them. It matched my breathing pattern, and I believe he initiated my nightly snoring! They know that when the snoring stopps, it is feeding time. 😅
My friend's daughter became a surrogate mommy for a baby Magpie that had fallen from it's nest. That was 10 years ago and they still have the magpie. They keep it in a cage in their living room. That bird was the most talkative and interactive bird I've ever seen. By "talk", I mean talk, as in "Polly want a cracker". I never knew that Magpies, like parrots, could be taught words and phrases. This Magpie, however, could speak complete sentences with amazing clarity. Better, in fact, that any parrot I've ever heard. I was truly impressed.
My Dad tells me a story that he was sat in his living-room one afternoon and heard a massive commotion outside. He looked out of the window to find around 20 seagulls fighting over a tray of chips that somebody had kindly thrown on the floor. This scene continued for a couple of minutes before a solitary Magpie hopped into the fold. Suffice to say, the large group of seagulls decided it was time to leave and all took off. They all sat on the roofs of the neighbouring houses, looking down to watch the magpie score their quarry. The natural world is strange sometimes. it really isn't always about size and stature if a creature. More often than not it's the mindset and confidence of another animal that leads them to prevail over others. If one can get the upper-hand phsycologically they usually come up trump's. I find it fascinating. Bruce Lee was bob-on when he said "if you think you're beaten, you are!"
Just want to share a weird magpie story I have. In my parents garden they had a one legged male magpie with a healthy female. We only started seeing them together around March since a bird with one leg is a little easy to recognize. But around a month ago we found a dead magpie In the garden. It was the female. And the male was hanging around the body along the fence. We had to get rid of the body 9f course. But for about a week after we moved the carcass. The male still only was around that same spot his mate was at. But also while moving the carcass the male was making quite a lot of noise while swooping fairly close to me as well as circling. Kind of a sad story. (BTW the guy forgot to mention that magpies are in Alberta and British Columbia in canada)
There are lots of Eurasian mapies in Korea, where I lived for over 10 years. They're a fine bird. They are far less agreesive and boisterous than their Australian cousins. The New Zealand Kea, an alpine parrot, are also very smart for birds.
@@YoureUsingWordsIncorrectly Apparently Australian/New Zealand magpies are only so-called but aren't related to the other Corvus pica birds. They are Gymnorhina tibicen. Like North American buffalo not being buffalo, or elk not being elk.
Thank you for this video. I love being outdoors in nature. I love watching magpies. I think the most I’ve seen is about 30-40. You have a new subscriber 💜😁
I can remember visiting a bird sanctuary in Devon or Cornwall in the 80s where they had a speaking magpie, has anyone else experienced talking magpies?
Yes I visited a hawk sanctuary and they had a talking magpie and a talking crow. Starlings are also very good imitators one on my street does a very good ringtone.
Love these birds- we have one out back we call Rambo- we rescued it about 15-16 yrs ago- was a young un and got attacked by a cat- OK but beat-up lookin' feathers out or disarray- too young to fly- the bird rescue folk came by to take and see to him- they let him go when he was able-- and not long after was back in the back garden! Unmistakable look, that's our Rambo! Has had a big family sometimes, sometimes down to one or two- the rest all disappear but Rambo stays around (by now he's big and sleek lookin', not beat-up, no feathers outta place).
I live in Montana and for the past 5 years we have had Magpies nest in a big spruce tree . This year they had four in there brood and they come in our yard every day they just fledged but are still uncertain flyers . It’s fun to sit out and watch them lean how to be a Magpie.Thanks for sharing
Yessss I did enjoy this video, I've got 2 magpies that are always in my garden, I've named them bonnie and Clyde as there soooooo naughty always teazing my dog and screaching, and they think the bird bath is just for them and I watch them every day hiding food in my bushes lol, I think there fascinating 😁
where I live, when we see just one magpie, we have always saluted to it, this supposedly blocks the sorrow. The magpies here absolutely terrorise the squirrels and cats , it is so funny to watch them circling a cat and taunting it and jumping and flying when the cat goes for them. you see the cats tail swinging with anger and the magpies keep coming back to wind up the cat. lol 😆
Thank you for watching this video!
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I have a good friend that has an animal sanctuary. She gets lots of animals and many birds every spring but she once got a baby magpie come in. She used to carry this baby magpie in her hoodie, wearing the hoodie backwards so the hood was at the front. She was always talking to him and he always talked back. They are great mimics and can make all kinds of sounds. They were always together except at night when she put him in a safe place to sleep. This little magpie was incredibly smart, even as a youngster. My friend and this magpie were inseparable and there was clearly a great bond and much love between them. When he grew up to be an adult, strong and healthy she knew the time had come to let him have his freedom. She knew when that time came when he started watching other magpies flying about in the garden. She let him fly but he kept coming back. She kept taking him back but also let him have access to the garden. One day he left and did not come back. Even though this was a success story for a rehabilitator, she was completely crushed. She missed him horribly. About a month later he showed up with a lady magpie. He introduced his new wife then they left. Soon after they had baby magpies and the whole family would come to visit her. This happened a few ago and he continues to visit her regularly.
❤❤❤
Wonderful!
Free food ye they are smart, bet there aint many indigenous song birds in the garden though.
What a lovely story. Thank you
What a lovely story thank you for sharing
I was privileged to share my home with a magpie for 10 plus years. Totally imprinted. Not by me.
She talked as well as our African Grey.
In two little girls voices. I can still hear
"Mommie come here !!
Right NOW" LoL
She got into everything.
Had a stash of "stuff"
under the potpourri in a Roseville pottery dish.
At least once a week she would throw the potpourri everywhere.
Line up all her treasure's and check them out. Then put them back. Put a couple of pieces of the potpourri over and fly off. Leaving me to clean up the mess.
She was a total joy.
I had a pair of magpies nesting in a tree outside where I used to live. One of them is easy to recognize because it's missing a part of its foot. I called it Stumpy and it's partner I called Crash. I would often lay out food for them when they had chicks and during winter and if I was late on some days with food, they'd come knocking on my window, it got to the point where they'd take food out of my hand or respond if I whistled for them. One year, they only had one chick and one morning, Crash came tapping at my widow but didn't want any food. Crash kept flying to a certain place in the garden, where Stumpy was sitting and back again so I went to investigate and found one of the chicks, unfortunatly, dead. I took the chick and went to bury it in a secluded spot and the entire time, while I was carrying the chick and digging the hole to bury it, they sat next to the dead chick. After I had buried it, they would sometimes sit by the grave or bring little pebbles or tiny twigs or even leave bits of food I gave them. It was very unusual but it was clear they were feeling a very certain way about their loss.
I had to move this year and the landlord, a lovely old lady who loves birds, promised she would keep feeding them. I moved about 10 minutes away and about a week after I moved, I woke up to a loud bang outside on my porch. I looked outside my window and there they were, Stumpy and Crash, chattering away like there was no tomorrow amongs a broken pot of growing strawberries. Either they accidentally or intentionally found me but I was still so happy to see them. They come by from time to time even now.
Thank you for sharing this story ❤
My Dad loved nature & birds, the day he died a Magpie flew around me constantly, I was outside making calls about my Dads passing, I was watching it, smiling x I’d always thought they were striking looking birds but never been near one. The next day one perched very close to me, I felt it knew I knew that was a hello from my Dad ♥️. It still happens that was 11 yrs ago.
There’s a family of magpies at my local park. I think it’s a bunch of first years and some parents. I saw that one of them that died about a month ago, and the whole family was mourning its death in a kind of ritual. They are most definitely very intelligent. As I wrote this at the same park, I watched them not five minutes ago play around with a rabbit, pestering it and chasing it around for a time. Then they got bored and went to looking for food, and the rabbit came back and they’re all foraging through the grass together. Nature truly is a marvel.
On may 18, when returning from work, I saw a single magpie on the side of the road, was starving, I did not salute him but I opened my palms and he jumped on them, I took him home, now is on my shoulder picking my earlobe. Please add to the list:
1. They are capable of love and affection!
2. They know their name
3. They will protect your chair if you have guests (they will swoosh and hit them)
4. They shit allot, much more if they are afraid, (I call it panik mode).
5. They don't shit on your head (like seen in a video involving the son of a celebrity)
6. They are lot smaller than it seems (you can see it after they take a bath)
7. If they do something bad and you scold them, it will retreat somewhere and start arguing with themselves.
8. If you leave the house, they will fly away to a high place then follow you, if you leave with the car, you can find them waiting on the highest place near your home when you return.
I shot one this week cuz it was eating all the bird seed and attacking the blue tits.
@@ethanlay1614 let nature take it's course, don't do this kinda shit FFS
@@ethanlay1614 you shot a bird because it ate the bird food you put out for.... birds???
@@paul1warr right 🤣
Can you please film all of that?
A year ago, my wife and I helped a young fledgling magpie that was on the footpath opposite our house. I could see two other magpies with it but the one in question had lots of downy feathers and appeared injured, at least, unable to take flight. We were concerned in could easily fall prey to any of several cats that patrol our area, so we brought it back to our house and called an animal/bird sanctuary. All during this time, one of the other magpies perched on electrical wires behind our house, observing everything. In the end, we took the young magpie to a large bush in our garden and after climbing a ladder with it in hand, we were able to get it on top of the foliage. We didn’t see it fly away but we checked the bush later and found no sign of it or the other magpie that had been watching us. Now a year later, a solitary magpie comes to the cherry tree in our garden. I am often sitting outside and it comes very close, not frightened or disturbed if I get up to walk closer. I spoke to it, as I had when reassuring the other fledgling a year ago and on two occasions it came onto the ground and hopped a little closer. It flies off if I get too close but I am convinced this is ‘our’ young magpie we helped a year ago.
Great story just needs some dragons added to it then you have a potential best seller.
ron donnis - I am quite insulted by your insinuation! It is NOT imagination, it actually happened and the magpie (if it is the one we helped) is still visiting our garden. It may be a different one of course. It did again yesterday evening. If you can’t trust me to tell the truth, you should look at yourself and ask yourself why you’re so cynical. I can’t abide lies and deceit - maybe that is something you know too much about. If that’s the case, I feel sorry for you but not everyone in your life will lie to you. I didn’t.
@@magnificentmuttley2084 I believe you. They are the smartest birds alive. I've had a few for pets and they have never ceased to amaze me. They make the most perfect pets. They are hilarious and good as having a pet dog.
@@kleighton100
Keeping a magpie as a pet doesn't sound an easy task.
How did you protected against sheeting everywhere all over the house?
🤔
@@gyongyipedersen9264 To be fair it hardly happened so wasn't a problem. Maybe because they had the run of both the inside and outside. I do remember the magpie sitting in my exercycle handle bars a bit and we did had the odd accident on that.
My aunt found a baby Magpie under a tree ( it had fallen from the nest ) she took that magpie home 15 years ago and now my aunt has passed away and Maggie the Magpie is still alive living with her son ( my cousin) they are amazing birds and I love having little Maggie as a part of the family lol
jill McIntyre, look at bird bath
💕🤗⚘👿
Aww , I love these stories ,
How do they keep her ... in a cage?
Jill, I'm so jealous ! 😃
I love magpies! It started when I was a child (72 now) and my brothers brought one back from the woods which had fallen from the nest, he used to talk and follow my mother around and call her Betty, he would peck our toes so we would hurry up and put our socks and shoes on for school, he would go out the garden and come in when he wanted, he lived with us for years one day he went off and never came home, we were told he had found a mate and got married. Lovely memories 🏴
Diolch 🎉
I had a Crow I rescued as a baby nestling who had been taken by a Hawk & dropped apparently, according to the witnesses who brought him to me. He had a badly ravaged wing and I didnt think he would survive but I got plenty of fluids & protein into him & nursed him through it all , even taught him to fly! and Nev chose to return & live with me for the next 3yrs despite our several attempts at releasing him back into the local population.
He was an extremely intelligent & affectionate creature & I grew to love him very much . I adored his quirky character, his love of water and bathing constantly , they are very misundersood & maligned birds people dont give them enough credit, they are fussy & clean & even dunk their food in water if they can, he shared his food also with his friends who would visit him , he would take pieces of meat or nuts & fruits out of his bowls up on his stand , would fly to the edge of the balcony and drop them over the side for the others to swoop down and retrieve. He has emptied his bowls numerous times doing that and the local Crows & pigeons still visit.
I miss him very much still 4 years on.
He lived indoors with me and yes his pooping was a constant problem, ...they are not to be considered as pets, especially as babies they poop a lot! ...my home was draped in old sheets, towels and curtains for 2yrs until he finally adapted to using the outside parrot stand I bought him for on my balcony.
I realised he poops when he eats & drinks so I bought a big set up where he could eat and poop into a tray I lined. He would climb up the ladders to the very top and sit there with his food bowls beside him , watching down over the gardens of the houses beside us & the town below, while his Crow friends would come perch on the nearby rooftops and visit & caw with him.
He was very territorial and never flew farther than where he could see the balcony from.
His wing was not strong and he needed to fly from a height ,once grounded he could not lift off to any great height alone...instead he ran around with my two dogs & thought he was a dog im sure! He had no fear of them ever, & would run at them , hiss or yell at them, firmly putting them in their place if they tried to rough play or took his toys, we were a very happy family.
I lost him in our 3rd year together when he was a big glossy beauty & loving his life. He flew down one 4.30 am morning as per our usual routine to see off my partner for work. I would let him exercise with the dogs and then place him up on a high wall from where he could lift himself to fly amongst the low trees there below my balcony until he would caw loudly for me to come get him.
He never called for me that morning & we never saw him again. A short while later just after 5am a neighbour of ours, who was pretty obsessed with Nev and with whom id had a previous incident, knocked on my door telling me some wild tale about seeing Nev on a road he would never be able to get to...this person was later on the same day admitted into a mental health unit, having given us different rambling stories , so I believe they did something to Nev that morning & in their intoxicated confusion decided to come tell me they saw him far away so i would think he just flew off.
Very sad 😔 I have wonderful videos & pics of him on my youtube channel here if anybody would like to see Nev as a baby.
God Rest his dear little soul..........
ah bless poor, 😢
poor Bird sorry PC typo
@@joecampbell6486 Thank you yes it was devastating. He was such a good & gentle creature he did not deserve the hard life he had...but thankfully he had me & I tried hard to make him happy in his too short life.
@@alisonmansfield9052 Thank you Alison.
in around 1980 when living in the country around Glastonbury we came across a featherless bird on the side of the road. We took it home and i squashed up worms which we fed to him with tweezers. He survived the first night and got bigger and bigger and eventually once he developed feathers we could tell he was a magpie. He out grew his box so we made a run, which he out grew. Eventually i realised he needed to fly so we h let him go free but he stayed with us. He would fly away but come back and settle on my shoulder, He ate anything and everything. Maggot as we called him was very territorial and attacked anyone who came through the gate. After 6 months or so we released him on top of the mendips in the forest by the TV mast. We went back a week later and we were in a clearing. Maggot came flying down and landed on my shoulder just like he always did. He looked very happy. I often think of how many little maggots he was a dad too. Beautiful bird, full of character
Love that story. Magpies are intelligent and charismatic.😊
What a lovely story. I Love people who care about our wildlife.
My favorate are black birds in Australia.
Beautiful story ❤ ♥
@@paulablakeborough9404 I adore all birds Paula but magpies are close to my favourite i guess for their cheeky behaviour. I am lucky enough to have sparrows visiting our bird table and the constant chirp chirp is one of natures joys. Glad you like my memory of Maggot.
The magpie is my dad ❤ when he died, unexpectedly, in 2020 during Covid I decided that my dad was the magpie that came to my garden at the time of his death. I am from South Shields, we support Newcastle United, we are The Mags… ironically, I live in Leicestershire and see more Magpies here than I ever saw in South Shields … I love corvid birds all of them beautiful, just like my dad ❤
Wow your story is so similar to mine I got goosebumps! Every time I see a solo magpie I do the traditional salute and blow a kiss and say I love you into the air for my pops to catch! My grandparents kept a magpie and it fascinated me as a child, the morning after my pops passed (😢April 2020 but not covid related) I had a visit from 3 very noisy magpies in my garden and I truly believe it was my grandparents bringing my pops to let me know they were all together again and no one will ever tell me different ❤
I still salute the first Magpie I see every day. Something my Grandad taught me to do when I was a kid.
I love magpies. I love the way they call. Beautiful, clever birds.
I raised one that my dog rescued as it fell out of a nest. It ate with the dog from its bowl and picked out all the best tidbits. It rode on the back of my dog. It greeted me after school and it went to bed by itself in a makeshift open basket as a cage. I loved him or her until one day there was another magpie on the other side of the fence. They cackled to each other and one day they took off together, never to be seen again. I will never forget my clever little friend. Suffice to say that I love these birds. 😊❤😊
I’m a 65 year old man in central Scotland. I never saw a magpie until my 20’s. Now, I see them every day. Must have discovered the greatness of Scotland eventually. Great vid. Subbed.
Hi eddie.first of all 65 is young lol.and your in scottland.what a beautiful place.im traveling there for work in sept.so maybe il see many birds.and other unique.anamals.have a. Great day.
Thank you for this video and thank you for writing the text. As a german guy it is difficult to follow the spoken words, especially when music is in the background (which wasn´t too bad). We found a little magpie under our tree four weeks ago. We took it in our house and cared for it. The intelligence was just stunning. The little bird grew fast, learned to fly and - sad to say - left us after three weeks. The relatives monitored every movement of their child and requested to have it back. But when we left it alone in the garden, they did not come to feed. So we continued feeding it and now it is back with its family, sometimes greeting us from a tree. We are happy about that but we miss it. It was such a sweet baby. The nest in our tree is still there and we hope it will come back making some new little maggies.
Brilliant story. I would love to include the script all the time but I believe you can use the youtube subtitles function which would help you to follow along as I'm speaking?
I love magpies, I rescued two in the past and they are so smart, huge satisfaction watching them become independent and go live with their wild counterparts.
This video made me smile. Recently I have one of my chimneys cleared out by chimney sweeps who took away 5 large bin bags of twigs and other nesting materials. I wanted to have a fire to save on fuel. I only had time to have one because they returned and yesterday I counted 5 on my lawn after the bird food i had distributed. They are now back in the chimney and I am collected umpteen twigs daily from the hearth and hearing sweet little tweets in the early evening. They are very considerate though because they keep quiet while I am watching TV.
Hi Gladys. Im glad you enjoyed the video and hope you can continue to enjoy the others on this channel. It does sound like they have chosen your chimney and wont stop until you accept them as house mates. But it could be worse, at least they stay quiet whilst the TV is on! Cheers.
Super-smart, super funny birds. Watching the youngsters play and chat to each other is a delight.
I have befriended the local magpie couple in my garden, every morning I put out two pecans on my windowsill, I wait a couple of minutes, and they come to collect them. I close the blinds slightly so they don't get too worried about me, but I can watch them really up close, they are just incredibly beautiful! And so smart, it only took a couple of mornings before they started anticipating the nuts being there for them every day. The couple are very easy to spot because the male has a 'dropped' wing that doesn't fold in properly, he does very well though and it doesn't seem to worry him.
Talking about their intelligence I have a water bowl at my feeding station one day there was a pigeon eating the food and the Magpie didn't want to wait and proceeded to splash it till it left. These are one of my favourite birds.
I have always loved magpies! They add so much to the Swedish winter landscape. Their colouring is lovely. In Sweden, having a magpie-nest on your farm brings good luck, and I always hope they'll build their enormous, messy nests in one of my trees: once they start, they just build onto the old nest, and you get a lovely piece of post-modern architecture!
Magpies on a farm are a pest as they take as many eggs and young ones of any game or songbirds they can relentlessly route out,that's why most conscientious farmers cull them
@@mickwalsh8136 Pity we cant cull people like you..........
@@mickwalsh8136 Magpies are always pests. Evil creatures.
About 5/6 years ago a baby MAGPIE came into MY BUNGALOW and stayed for about an hour with my carers and myself
Hello blixten.thats a lovely way at looking at nature. Like you i always see the beauty in the world.i back onto a very deep forest so i see so much nature and many birds and animals.i watch all day long lol.nice to hear others loving art and nature.have a wonderful day from canada🌟✨😀🐭🐺🐶🐱🐰🐹🐦🐔
Many yrs ago, due 2 take final Nursing exam, in basement of old Nurses Home we kept bikes.
Magpie trapped btwn bikes so gently spoke/held him,, opened window + released him. Magpie stood, about 4 minutes, looking @ me up + down, then flew off! Later, I sat exam + Thank GOD I PASSED exam, Magpies r my favourite birds!! Jill ✅
Fantastic vid...we feed magpies/other crows/jays/herring gulls/pigeons/sparrows several times every day with a combination of watered bread, mixed seed and high protein food such as scraps of fatty food like chicken, sausage pork or whatever else we may have to hand...ensure they never go hungry, particularly at this time of year.
We also have two resident squirrels we feed with monkey nuts which disappear in minutes.
We also feed several resident foxes every night with watered dog biscuits, tinned dog food and any other scraps we may have....they love raw eggs when we have them.
On top of this, we have an insulated, illuminated and heated large aviary at the end of our garden where we house and feed 4 rescue cockatiels from Raystede with bread/mixed seed and lettuce, which they love three times a day.
Finally, we have a beautiful 16 year old Shi'tzu/Cavalier dog, Bobby we have had since he was a puppy...he eats like a horse and just loves baked liver and sausages along with Cesar dog food.
I barely have time to feed myself!
Bob, Hove
I have a Pair come to my back garden and i feel kinda special now after watching and learning from this video. I am so happy to know that I could be helping to extend their lifespan by feeding them. We need to re-educate people to take away the superstition attatchéd to them. Many would become as fascinated as I was, after learning of their astounding intelligence and other traits.
Brilliant! I am glad you enjoyed the video and learnt something new.
Objections are not superstitions but the need and desire to curb their nasty aggressive ways that are damaging to other species. The more you feed them and enable them to breed and breed, the fewer songbirds we will have, The longer they live, the same
Love them. When 1st moved to the UK I didn't know bird names and all that. I just thought I really like these birds and when I'd point them out to people they'd say "you like pies????" As if I was crazy. Then I became crazy about birds and I really don't like the negativity about them. They're wonderful birds.
Good for you.
They eat robin chicks. I don’t love them, but I guess that’s just nature.
I love magpies too. They are smart and they are funny. They also have a great gait and walk like they own the world, a real strut if I ever saw one.
Where I used to live I had a field full of magpies behind me, one day I counted 13. Good job I’m not _very_ superstitious.
Try & learn about what they do naturally. Nest robbers of both eggs & chicks. That's why in the countryside they get heavily controlled. My cousin has been controlling a farm in Hertfordshire & the song bird population numbers have gone up, even the farmer commented on the songbird numbers. He accounted in the first year to over 100 magpies, & there are still magpies around. Its good to have a general license so you can control some pests.
Your so like me I love birds so much crows robins magpies my favourite 🦅🦅🦅🦅
I've got a magpie nest in my garden this year ! First time ever. It's at the top of a tall holly tree.
They've got three youngsters, and the five of them keep me entertained with their antics everytime I look out of the window !
I love magpies. 😍
They've got Green Parrots to contend with now
@@tommygunn1887 Why, are YOU coming round ?
That’s the end of all your small birds then, don’t moan there’s no birds coming to your bird table when the magpies have killed them all.
Spit an Whistle on one ...... Works for me ...... Yes their plummage & tincture of colour is brilliant xx
There's a pair of magpies on the bench out the back every single morning. Tia my dog is as mesmerised as I am by them. Beautiful creatures.
I was watching my dog chew on a bone in our back garden. I was amused to see two Magpies work together to get the bone off my dog.
One would jump around causing a commotion by the bone whilst the other one went behind my dog and pecked at his tail. Sure enough when the dog turned around to bite the tail pecking Magpie, the other one stole the bone.
Very clever.
I currently have a family of six magpies in and around my garden. The couple have been successful at breeding for several years. I enjoy their antics and, when I put out mealworms in the feeders for the small garden birds, I throw a handful on the ground for them. They are very social and I am happy to encourage them. Garden birds are a treasure, cherish them.
They eat garden birds!
6 for Joy
We found a baby magpie that had fallen out of the nest. We took care of him until he was able to fly. He would come and go and then one day he didn't come back. He was a very intelligent bird and I will always remember all of his antics.
After a year of feeding and talking to magpies and crows as they landed in my small garden two of the magpies have finally came down near my feet to get some mealworms.They make their friendly cracking noise while on the fence when I call them hello maggypie! They are so clever! I also have 3 related jackdaws that come down as well,amazing!
I have been lucky enough to see a pair build there nest and it took them about three weeks carrying sticks two foot long and breaking them up. All day they would do this i was amazed at how dedicated they were. Two fledglings hatched and there parents are teaching them to fly love watching them now i feel like i am as happy as there parents they survived.
Over the past 2 years we've had less Magpies than usual with the result we have more songbirds again. The dawn chorus is a sound to behold at the moment with cheeping from the small birds and the Blackbirds and their beautiful song plus many more. Gives me the feel good factor.
There were 10 magpies on a roof opposite our house the other day.If i had an air riffle.
When a Ewe is pregnant, sometimes it can roll over onto its back, because the back is wide and the lamb/s is heavy it cannot recover. If a Magpie spots it, he will fly down and take the eyes to eat. Also they search hedges and trees looking for nests with young or eggs, I very often find beautifully woven nests on the floor. So I shoot as many Magpies as I can.
People think these are lovely birds. They are not, they kill numerous small birds and their young, like you said, the will take the eyes of new born lambs and sometimes even calves. Along with crows they ard the scourge of the countryside
Fool playing God ! Perhaps if you went to school when you were young you would have been told about nature, you should have your gun take away from you by the authorities, !
What does a lion do for food you daft fool, go to Tesco's It Eats bambi!
Magpies are fabulous birds, always fascinating to watch. Great video, very interesting.
While in Baghdad, Iraq these birds impressed me profoundly. We had one stop us on the street once and when we tried to walk around it the bird met our every step with loud screeches and physical interference to our attempts to ignore it. Finally my friend said, “Let me see your bottle of water”. I handed it to him and he started to remove the cap and the bird went screwy. It was jumping and squawking like it was nuts. Patrick bent over and fed the water to the thirsty bird. From high on its perch atop a pole it had spotted us with me holding that water bottle and flew down at us interrupting our advance in order to persuade us to give it some water. It was uncanny. I will never forget that as long as I live.
I rescued a disabled magpie 4 weeks ago... Arthur is very much my baby now and I absolutely adore him ❤
These birds are very intelligent and are great team workers. I do not like them though as they bully and are destructive in their nature. I have observed them pulling out and throwing freshly planted onions and throwing other birds young out of nests without eating them. My cat mimics magpie noises to attract them in to catch them. I was amazed to see this for the first time.
I hate these horrid birds, I'm not in the UK but here they're not nice.
@@gloriadenning3860 I kill them all if it were legal
I love Magpies and have a had a breeding pair at the bottom of my garden for the last 8 years. A farmer friend once told me that more than one pair per 25 acres is too many, as they will predate on other birds. I enjoy capturing them in flight, especially when the sunlight brings out their true colours.
Magpies are very a beautiful Bird, thanks for this amazing video, Have a great week my friend 👍 Serge 🍁
My special babies! There are loads where I live, a pair of them come and hop around in the garden every day. They're so pretty and shiny! And so cheeky looking
I have befriended a pair of magpies that live in the trees around my home. They’ve been here as long as i have 17years this year! I have a small garden which attracts a lot of birds and one or two cats who like basking on a bench beneath some trees. The magpies keep watch for the cats and sound the alarm for the other birds and to let me know the cats are in the garden! So pleased i found your channel - i,m fascinated by my bird friends. I walked to the tube station and was waiting on the platform on a nice day last week it was as if the crows, magpies and wood pigeons had followed me. They fly very close to me when i am out walking almost as if to say hi. 🐦⬛
I used to believe in the superstitions but not any more. I find just as much Joy from seeing 1 magpie as I do with 2. They have always been my favourite bird and they always will be ❤️
Thanks for the vid. My cat quite appreciated it. Everyday I open my patio window and a magpie sits on my patio chair and natters at my cat.... my cat listens for a while... magpie gets quiet... and she natters back at him chirping like a bird. The magpie listens for a while and flies off. Every single day this keeps happening.
Cheers! They are very smart so perhaps by waiting for the cat to respond the magpie is ensuring where it is. Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment.
There's a pair of magpies in our garden. I call them Magnus and Marion. Magnus has been here since he was a young bird he isn't tame, but he is very bold and relaxed. We had an elderly cat Houdini, that was outside most of last summer and who we feed outside. Magnus would come right up and feed from the side of of the bowl alongside our cat! Magnus would defend the bowl from neighbouring or passing cats. Since Houdini died I still put food out for Magnus a couple of times a week. He will come tap on the conservatory or hop about calling under the kitchen window and ask for it. He seemed to mourn Houdini for a number of week when he died. The cat was buried in the garden and Magnus would fuss about the area where he was buried and pile twigs and leaves up there for several weeks. Marion and he are nested in our Garden this year, but nearly lost their young to a young Raven. They valiantly defended there nest though and one of the brood survived and has fledged.
We've got magpies here in the US too! They're always getting into our trash bins... definitely smart creatures.
Are they the same species as this or the larger version?
@@AShotOfWildlife I’m in the us in idaho to be exact and the magpies here that I’ve seen look exactly like the ones in this video!!! Magpies are my favorite land animal!!
There are black-billed magpie (the one in usa also called american magpie) they look very similar to Eurasian magpie but they are not the same. All magpies are very intelligent and annoying birds.
@@cloudcastle338 eqtetetwtyeewte5ew5etetwtwtet
@@user-vk7cp1op9p whatwhatwhatwhat areyousaying?
I have two beautiful magpies that have come to visit regularly. One perhaps the male more frequently.
My cat runs out excited to see him and very quietly just sits and watches. Mr Magpie has been bringing my cat little sticks and pieces of paper and drops it down off the patio railing for him. Kinda like a gift .
I went out with a few selections of seeds and placed them on the railing post. He came by and garbled away as if to talk to me and thanked me for the food.
He has become a regular and so very much enjoyed. He really sounds like he is trying very hard to have a conversation back when I gently talk to him .
Excellent 👌
I adore them. Wonderful little dinosaurs.
You have to admire them, if for their intelligence alone.
I dont really like them, they kill smaller birds and kill the babies
@@TopTechSavvy the weak must die
It's clearly a bird.
I have a magpie nest in my willow tree and today I saw a baby magpie sitting on a branch with mum, sitting so close together they were almost touching. Wonderful.
A Willow tree?, very unusual for a Magpie to use a Willow tree to nest in. And have you ever wondered why they put a roof over the nest?. Probably so other birds like Carrion crows cant see the eggs & get to them. Because when the song birds are nesting Magpies make a living taking eggs & killing chicks. I have a small number of Magpies around me where i live, as soon as the numbers get higher out come the Larsen traps & rifle!!
Amazing but the magpies are again building a nest in the willow tree in my garden and others are nesting in the trees in the park next to me. Fascinating birds to watch, to see them sitting close together and, last year, to see them sit as a little family with their chicks. Nature means birds of different sizes destroy smaller ones and steal eggs, that's the cycle of life and death. To think of deliberately killing magpies is hideous and illegal. I hope you are reported and fined heavily.
Magpies are the only bird I've seen harassing cats. Ya gotta love a cocky corvid...
One of my mother's neighbours had an elderly tomcat whose hearing wasn't that good anymore and I heard he was harassed by magpies eventhough I didn't personally witness it. I find jackdaws more annoying because they are more vocal and move in crowds, even if I don't feel that strongly about them either.
They do it so as to protect their fledgings in advace.
@@user3141592635 Got 2 magpie in my neighbourhood that throughout June n July actually escort the local cat home......And the cat does as it is told every time.
I’ve had 2 blackbirds in my garden for several years, the male always chase away the cats. I’ve seen it strait fly into the cat and make the cat run for it’s life.
Magpies attacked my cat in a,tree, he was so shocked i had to take him to the vets. When my cat went into the garden the magpies homed in on him to give him a peck.
Still, i do love watching them.
I once had a Magpie enter an open bedroom window to steal something shiney on the window sill, it didn't know I was in the room as the curtain was closed, you can imagine the surprise it had when it realised I had seen it before helping it back outside. Lovely to see one up so close and hold one for a few seconds.
American Indians believe there is nothing braver than a lone crow 👍
I used to keep getting coconut feeders taken from my bird feeder on a regular basis. One day I caught the culprit! A magpie! It’s meant coming up with more challenging ways of keeping feeders attached to the feeding station. For me it shows how we under estimate and under value the intelligence in the natural world!
Not intelligence... simply hunger. Even the dullest person can find essentials like food
@@islanddweller3674 still has to work out how to unhook it from the bird feeder. In other experiments crows have been presented with multiple stage puzzles to gain access to food. They succeed. That’s intelligence. Working out the stages required to gain access to a food reward.
Today I saw 4 magpies and was really blown back by their feathers. They're really beautiful.
Thanks Liam for sharing everything about the Magpies! Great compilation of facts and footage. Greetings and have a good day! // Bertil.
Well not quite everything e.g. a pair decided to frequent our garden last year, and made know to all around their arrival. At first I was annoyed they came, but now 2 years later I have notice something about all the other birds in the garden.
These magpies have changed the whole dynamics of the garden wildlife behaviour, including evicting the unwanted squirrels that nested in the same tree. That I don't mind, as the squires where often court sealing a whole fat ball. The Magpies also protect the feeders from the hordes of Crows and Jack doors, who can in one sitting completely empty all the feeders. Now everyone gets a look in. However this does not stop the Crows and particular the Jack doors from pestering the Magpies especially when they have young it seems.
Plus our long garden leaves us with five neighbours two of which have cats. The Magpies act as an alarm when ever a cat enters our garden, and we like this, because the cats are always shitting in our veg beds, and or killing our birds. The pair have so far managed to fleg 2 young Magpies, but during the time when they are out of the nest and on the ground learning to fly, the adults took the alarm screech to another level, which meant of course we'd come and see what all the fuss is about!
We now enjoy our Magpies and welcome to our garden.
Great videos by the way, its good to learn off each other about our wildlife!
Magpies so familiar in England... just so good to see them everyday it's like they watch over us... I've always liked them
I have always said Good Morning Mr Magpie as far back as I can remember. They are regular visitors to our garden as we feed them along with the sparrows,robins ,wren, blackbirds, thrushes ,wood pigeons, collared doves and jackdaws.The jackdaws are the most nervous of them all.
In 2020, I went to the UK to give an exam ( the exam center was only based in the UK) and for the first time in my life I saw a magpie and I thought to my self what a beautiful bird ❤️ I passed my exam even though I saw a single magpie
That's a lovely story :)
Flapping your arms really works! I was very poor, living on the streets, when I saw a single magpie and flapped my arms. Now I'm very rich, no worry about anything. Amazing!
I used to have a magpie jackdaw pairing (presumably not a mating pair) who would fly down on to my balcony to eat dinner together every night, then fly off together. Was interesting behaviour!
Magpies, Crows and Jackdaws tend to follow each other around. I've seen them playing with each other many times.
We always say, "good morning/afternoon Mr Magpie, have a nice day". Just something we were taught as kids to ward off bad luck, and though I'm not superstitious, I still do it. 😁👍
If you do it, you're superstitious.
Same
@@sos1474 what’s wrong with that?
Me too😊
I say hello hopalong because of the way they hop along
Excellent stuff ! Corvids are amazing birds. Many people are quick to point out their 'bad's points, but the fact that in the wild they don't live many years although capable of living decades (especially ravens) shows how hard it is just to eek out a living - like us dying before our thirties.
Whats a corvid? I've never heard of that.
@@Waseemmmm Corvids or corvidae is the scientific term for passerine birds. This genus include crows, magpies, jackdaws, ravens, jays, rooks, the list goes on.
@@Waseemmmm These are the ones I don't like to see too many of, as you will experience a decline in songbirds in your garden if there are too many around. It's the 'nature and the apex predator' issue.
I just had one jump on my windowsill and stare at me through the window 😂🤣😂🤣 sadly I could get a picture in time it made me jump 🤣😂🤣😂
Lots of naive affection here for this egg predator. I love birds but glady watch the magpie being shot on RUclips.
i used to have my breacky on the roof in the nice weather, i lived in a observatory on top of a hill in the woods, a magpie would wait for me most mornings, i would feed it bits, it became quite tame, it would sit on the railings about a meter away, just watching me, it loved bacon rindes the best, there was a strange way with it, like it would look into my mind/heart, thats how it felt,good times, the simple things in life are free, ive always loved the wildlife, this just reminded me of long ago, thanks for sharing with us,
love and contentment, Bobble&MrTao,xxx
What a brilliant channel! Thanks Liam.
Cheers. I hope you carry on enjoying it :)
In 1983, when on my new motorcycle, I witnessed the very tragic sight of a magpie which had been killed by a car, its body crushed by other vehicles, and its partner constantly flying down and away from the traffic to where the remains lay in the road. I knew they paired for life and was extremely saddened by the incident.
Very sad! 😢😢😢
Yep , i saw the same behavior with indian mynahrs long ago . Tje implications just gotta change our whole frame of references. . However there's clearly been an evolutionary process since 1970s cos today we don't see mynahrs any more as road kill .
I have seen them attempt to rescue eachother from such situations. Abour three dragging an injured one to safety out of traffic but alas to no avail appeared to grieve around it
Michael Archangel, this is interesting. It seems like I read that Magpies mourn a lost member of the flock and will actually have a wake.
Glad it got crushed. Cant stand them.
Thank-you for great video.
Respect to all our wild life out there,how they must struggle each day, to survive that very often, harsh environment.
I love this and the other bird storeys xxxxxx
They also as I have observed tend to stop fighting between other birds. They stop them from fighting. Quite amazing and so intelligent
I always salute a single magpie, learnt that from an old girlfriend.
Were I live it's traditional/ lucky to salute and say "good morning Mr Magpie, how is your wife? "
I always salute a single magpie then im looking for another one ,,two for 😂
@@Buster_Piles don't take the piss because his partner left him.
@@gavinthomas7375 that's probably why he looks so happy.
Was she a nice bird!
I have a small dog Emily, when she is outside sunning in the backyard. There is this Magpie who visits starts laughing or teasing Emily. She will bark at it and the Magpie will fly away.
We had a magpie who worked out that our cat was harmless and her food was put out in our conservatory. The door to the conservatory was open a small amount and some birds would get in and be unable to get out without help. The magpie was able to walk in, ignore the cat, eat her food and walk out again.
@Jazzmaster Jay Not this one. Harassed by magpies.
@Jazzmaster Jay Exactly, they are very destructive.. there should be a law restricting the number per household to ONE.
@@sunnyjim1355 My cat would agreee with you. He would outlaw any competitors for my affection, or food.
There's a pair of magpies in our garden. I call them Magnus and Marion. Magnus has been here since he was a young bird he isn't tame, but he is very bold and relaxed. We had an elderly cat Houdini, that was outside most of last summer and who we feed outside. Magnus would come right up and feed from the side of of the bowl alongside our cat! Magnus would defend the bowl from neighbouring or passing cats. Since Houdini died I still put food out for Magnus a couple of times a week. He will come tap on the conservatory or hop about calling under the kitchen window and ask for it. He seemed to mourn Houdini for a number of week when he died. The cat was buried in the garden and Magnus would fuss about the area where he was buried and pile twigs and leaves up there for several weeks. Marion and he are nested in our Garden this year, but nearly lost their young to a young Raven. They valiantly defended there nest though and one of the brood survived and has fledged.
@@NikiHolmes Nice story.
I LOVE ❤️
This VIDEO JD,.
This is great documentary 👏 . I learned what I wanted to know. Thank you.
I started feeding magpies during lockdown. For start I had two magpies and one day I saw 10 of them in my garden 🙃 ...some of them were babies and I saw how babies were fed, was amazing to see...
Now, every morning I love seeing them and they even waiting for me to come out.
Very informative.
I have seen a few of your bird videos, respectfully may I make a suggestion?
Have you considered adding a few examples of the call of the bird under description?
I would find this very helpful, and am sure others viewers would also.
I have the same pair coming into my garden for the last 5 years - long may they continue to do so 😎
love your channel ,and love the Magpies ,I always salute a single Magpie if I see one and say Hi Mr. Magpie how's your wife and kids. I lived in Australia for years and migrated back to Cornwall 2 and a half years ago ,the Magpies in Oz have lovely singing voices. Finding your fabulous channel has helped me find out about the lovely birds, I also enjoyed your Robin ones...Many Blessings to you...
I adore Magpies. I have befriend a local pair for a year. Every morning I hand out some food to them.
One morning I was early up, relaxing in the sofa, when I heard a new sound from one of them. It matched my breathing pattern, and I believe he initiated my nightly snoring!
They know that when the snoring stopps, it is feeding time. 😅
My friend's daughter became a surrogate mommy for a baby Magpie that had fallen from it's nest. That was 10 years ago and they still have the magpie. They keep it in a cage in their living room. That bird was the most talkative and interactive bird I've ever seen. By "talk", I mean talk, as in "Polly want a cracker". I never knew that Magpies, like parrots, could be taught words and phrases. This Magpie, however, could speak complete sentences with amazing clarity. Better, in fact, that any parrot I've ever heard. I was truly impressed.
What a fun life for a magpie...living in a cage.
It shouldn't be in a cage! It's a wild bird and needs other Magpies.
My Dad tells me a story that he was sat in his living-room one afternoon and heard a massive commotion outside. He looked out of the window to find around 20 seagulls fighting over a tray of chips that somebody had kindly thrown on the floor.
This scene continued for a couple of minutes before a solitary Magpie hopped into the fold. Suffice to say, the large group of seagulls decided it was time to leave and all took off. They all sat on the roofs of the neighbouring houses, looking down to watch the magpie score their quarry.
The natural world is strange sometimes. it really isn't always about size and stature if a creature. More often than not it's the mindset and confidence of another animal that leads them to prevail over others.
If one can get the upper-hand phsycologically they usually come up trump's.
I find it fascinating.
Bruce Lee was bob-on when he said "if you think you're beaten, you are!"
We have them in Alaska as well. Amazing creatures.
Love magpies,beautiful cheeky birds
Just want to share a weird magpie story I have. In my parents garden they had a one legged male magpie with a healthy female. We only started seeing them together around March since a bird with one leg is a little easy to recognize. But around a month ago we found a dead magpie In the garden. It was the female. And the male was hanging around the body along the fence. We had to get rid of the body 9f course. But for about a week after we moved the carcass. The male still only was around that same spot his mate was at. But also while moving the carcass the male was making quite a lot of noise while swooping fairly close to me as well as circling. Kind of a sad story. (BTW the guy forgot to mention that magpies are in Alberta and British Columbia in canada)
There are lots of Eurasian mapies in Korea, where I lived for over 10 years. They're a fine bird. They are far less agreesive and boisterous than their Australian cousins. The New Zealand Kea, an alpine parrot, are also very smart for birds.
@@YoureUsingWordsIncorrectly Apparently Australian/New Zealand magpies are only so-called but aren't related to the other Corvus pica birds. They are Gymnorhina tibicen. Like North American buffalo not being buffalo, or elk not being elk.
Thank you for this video. I love being outdoors in nature. I love watching magpies. I think the most I’ve seen is about 30-40. You have a new subscriber 💜😁
I can remember visiting a bird sanctuary in Devon or Cornwall in the 80s where they had a speaking magpie, has anyone else experienced talking magpies?
Shut up.
Yes I visited a hawk sanctuary and they had a talking magpie and a talking crow. Starlings are also very good imitators one on my street does a very good ringtone.
Love these birds- we have one out back we call Rambo- we rescued it about 15-16 yrs ago- was a young un and got attacked by a cat- OK but beat-up lookin' feathers out or disarray- too young to fly- the bird rescue folk came by to take and see to him- they let him go when he was able-- and not long after was back in the back garden! Unmistakable look, that's our Rambo! Has had a big family sometimes, sometimes down to one or two- the rest all disappear but Rambo stays around (by now he's big and sleek lookin', not beat-up, no feathers outta place).
One magpie opened a backpack that was completely closed using the zipper on the bag and stole baby maya’s sandwich.. definitely a smart bird
I live in Montana and for the past 5 years we have had Magpies nest in a big spruce tree . This year they had four in there brood and they come in our yard every day they just fledged but are still uncertain flyers . It’s fun to sit out and watch them lean how to be a Magpie.Thanks for sharing
That was informative.They are great for cleaning out the gutters and moss off the roof.I always thank them
Great video. Magpies a cool
The beautiful bird being shot, could have lived so much longer. The ignorance of my own species, when will we grow up. RIP little one. 🙏🏼❤️
Yessss I did enjoy this video, I've got 2 magpies that are always in my garden, I've named them bonnie and Clyde as there soooooo naughty always teazing my dog and screaching, and they think the bird bath is just for them and I watch them every day hiding food in my bushes lol, I think there fascinating 😁
where I live, when we see just one magpie, we have always saluted to it, this supposedly blocks the sorrow. The magpies here absolutely terrorise the squirrels and cats , it is so funny to watch them circling a cat and taunting it and jumping and flying when the cat goes for them. you see the cats tail swinging with anger and the magpies keep coming back to wind up the cat. lol 😆