My Parson Russell dog(Gus)had a crow as his friend. In summer they would lie sunbathing together. When I took Gus for a walk, the crow, whom I called Eric followed us everywhere. Often he would swoop down just above Gus and walk along the path through the woods just in front of us. My wife and I fed him for the last 6 years of Gus's life. Gus died in 2021. Yet Eric the crow still comes to us every day to be fed. He still likes to play with the squeaky rubber balls we bought for Gus. They used to both play with them in our garden. Eric recognises our car coming along the street. He sees it coming and lands on the fence at our driveway!
We had a pet crow that lived with us when we were kids in the 70s, he had a damaged wing so couldn’t fly, he used to spend all his time with us in the car in the house, he was really friendly, his name was Charlie the crow.
I have the same at the moment, but with a pigeon. He got hit by a car. His name, funnily enough, is ‘pigeon.’ I tried for several weeks to get him flying again: I used to take him in a cardboard box to a nearby lawn. I used to throw him gently but as high as possible into the air, to try to get him to extend his damaged wing. He always used to crash-land. One day, I threw him up and, as usual, he crash-landed. He then gathered himself, walked over to his cardboard box and jumped back in it. I knew then that he was telling me in the only way that he could that he had given up and that he was not going to be able to fly again. It was a really sad moment for me. I decided that I would look after him for the rest of his life, and then I found out that in captivity pigeons can live until they are fifteen or more years old. He was less than a year old when I found him! He’s good company, though. Once you get to know a bird - even a pigeon - you start to realise just how intelligent they are and how loyal they are to you, too.
@@jimmyniland9721Hope 'Pigeon' is doing well and enjoying life as best he can. It really is a privilege to have one of our feathered friends in your life.
Here in Berlin a hooded crow was given to animal welfare people because its owner had to move into a nursing home. This pet crow has a crippeled foot so it is very easy to regognize (and not just the last one in a series of pet crows). The relatives of the owner said that he had this crow for more than 40 (fourty) years. Mäxchen is still alive.
good video, I love crows, I'm being followed around by two crows for years. Feeding the birds has developed into a loyal friendship. Very intelligent birds, they understand and can be trained. My two crows are the offspring of my departed crows, which I buried a few years ago. I never let them inside the house, however I find it strange they stayed close by until their death. Now the young crows left orphaned follow my car for miles while I'm out shopping. They land when they see me stop, I buy them oat muffins, then sip my coffee. It's a strong bond. I'm hoping more people will appreciate them more by having a relationship with nature, whereby spiritual connection can be achieved for greater purpose and peace.
I started feeding a couple of them on my window ledge about a year ago, only now does the male stick around and peer at me through the window as I have a chat with him the female usually Just grabs the food and flys off mostly. Had a real hot day last week so I left some bread soaked with water and they were very happy. And yes you feel the connection don't you it's a great feeling connecting with nature like that.
God Bless you I completely agree the spiritual connection to nature once achieved can never be broken, I wish many more humans would understand this 🕊🙏😇✝️💕
I am loving your videos. I already know a fair bit about corvids and you did a great job of making the crow seem less negative. Its such a shame as theyre clever, loyal and playful wee things and I love them. Corvids and foxes get such bad press!
Thank you for the crow video! Here in Canada we have the American Crow. In the northwest of Calgary, there has been seen a large group (100+) of crows that gathers in the fall and winter. This could be due to the interesting fact that crows will often congregate in large numbers (sometimes up to TWO MILLION!) in winter to sleep in communal roosts (Cornell University 2015). Some of these roosts have been established for 100 years or more, and will stay in an area even after it has become urbanized (Cornell University 2015).
Crows are amazing birds .Glad you hi- lighted how they work so hard rearing and teaching The young birds can try it on by demanding and to watch the mum deal with this is unreal .All the corvid family are spectacular As is your video Many thanks and greetings ★.👍.
I live in rural France,, in southern Brittany (near Nantes). We have a big garden and are very close to a big forest. The bird life is amazing, I'm starting to think that the pigeons and crows have a deal to come and eat at ours seperately. One day I open the door and the garden is full of crows, the next, it's full of pigeons. We always throw our food scraps out on the lawn and get all sorts of birds coming for breakfast. Our resident robin tries to chase them off, whilst the cat and the dog sit by idly, watching! Mornings are magical, with a garden full of birds! I'm starting to feel that the birds recognise me now, know I'm not a threat and I can get quite close to them!
That was brilliant, thank you! There are countless weird, wonderful and amazing birds on the planet but my favourites are the Crow family; highly intelligent and such fantastic carachters, I love them all, Jackdaws, Crows, Rooks, Magpies, all of em.
The most astonishing thing I've seen carrion crows do was a co-operative pizza liberation, from an overflowing bin, involving two birds hefting said food (a v large half pizza) back into its box, then several others jumping onto the sticking out bit of box, until, rather in the manner of a trebuchet, the pizza was flipped onto the ground, where they ate all the good bits, olives bacon &c and then abandoned it to the pigeons.. Very clever indeed, I thought.. 👍
Crows are very intelligent, and always out for what they can get. Much like humans. After I fed the group near my house for a few months, they started to appear wherever I went. When I go to the shops, there's usually a crow perched on the roof watching. They're usually waiting for an opportune moment to come pester me for food. The other day I took my dog to the park and two crows waited patiently on the grass next to us while we finished our game of fetch. One time a crow even went into my backpack and took a piece of dog food!
@@Crow_Friend True! The old groups I used to feed a couple years ago still remember me! My local pair have gotten more and more bold in the past few months. Now they hang out on my balcony and watch me and my dog like we're TV 🙂
@@Crow_Friend I wouldn't be surprised. Sometimes they hang out on the roof across the road and 'gently' try to get my attention... and my monkey nuts. :D
The ability to recognise you is not restricted to carrion crows - at least in my experience, all from the crow family has this. Where I live, I usually greet the birds in a friendly tone when I see them, and I have noticed that after a while they don't flee anymore, but stay on the ground, even when I pass close by - as if they recognise that I am no threat - at least that is what I am making myself believe ;-)
I used to spend a lot of time on Bukemham Marsh ( near Norwich). It has the largest rookery,. thousands upon thousands roost there in winter. The murmurations are incredible
Great video! As An American, I watched this and other videos to compare the Carrion Crow to the American Crow. Of all crows, Carrion Crow seems the most simlar to the American Crow even more than other American species like the Fish Crow. The Carrion Crow is a slightly larger cousin, having a lower pitched voice but even gives the same rocking motion when calling. Both species even give the same rattling call. I'd love to get over to Europe to see these guys myself one day.
The other day a Carrion Crow I've got to know flew past my head to grab my attention ( nothing unusual with that ) and then flew to the top of a lamp post which I was walking towards - The Crow then pulled out one of its wing feathers and dropped it at my feet as I walked underneath it. It was a weird yet nice surprise. I took the feather as a souvenir.
Yet another great video! Just a suggestion; do you have (or might you possibly do) a video on the British Jay? The first time I saw one was only a few years ago (near Swansea, where I was living at the time), and didn't know what it was! But I was struck by how beautiful it was. I know it's a very nervous/skittish bird, as it would literally turn round in mid flight, if it saw me watching from the window as it flew past. 😀
Hello. I don't have a video completed of Jay's yet but they are on my hitlist. That'll be out in a few weeks :) I'm glad you found my channel and I hope you continue to enjoy it!
@@AShotOfWildlife Thanks, Liam! I'll look forward to that...in the meantime, I'll work my way through your other videos! All the best from South Wales! 😀👍
Thanks for this. I llive almost at the top of a hill in North London. Across the top of the hill is a line of enormous plane trees planted in the 1890s. They're occupied by carrion crows, magpies and other birds but the corvids dominate. They're fascinating to watch through binoculars from my balcony and are as you say really bright.
I love corvids of all sorts. I swear one played peek a boo with me when landed behind a bin just out of sight. I got up and walked away ad turned to see it trying to see round the bin as if it was looking for me. I had told it off for trying to eat the contents of a dirty nappy bag.
I often confuse carrion crows with ravens. I think I can differentiate them from their tail plumage in flight (still a bit unconvinced) and their calls …but therein lies the rub, both are great mimics. So calls are out of the picture. Ravens are very much larger than crows - I need crow and a raven side by side to judge size and in the distance that is impossible. Fortunately I love all corvids. Birds even. Still I have heard rumours that we have ravens on the farm we live on in Bedfordshire/ Cambridgeshire but I am not convinced until I can prove it for myself. As for carrion crows and rooks - one key feature that I found easy to distinguish between them is that the rook has the naked beak reminiscent of a vulture whereas the crow has a more “polished” looking beak. Unscientific, I know but that helped me a lot.
I have a rescue crow that now won’t leave she is so friendly to me but hubby is not that welcome and they are very intelligent as you said. Excellent video 👍
@@connorb2112 hi sorry didn’t quite understand your reply but my crow doesn’t tolerate my husband being in the aviary next to me she gets jealous my crow only wants to be with me so I understand crows are like my geese a pair for life and poor hubby even though he looked after Munnin the crow he’s not part of the family it’s just me and Munnin 👍
I can see these videos being really interesting to non birders bringing them into the brethren. So many people think we only boring birds without colour and not worth looking at compared to other countries. Yet we have an amazing array of beautiful colourful birds and even more diverse behaviours. If we can get more people interested in birds, then more will be interested in the environment as a whole. Whilst doing crows will you be covering choughs and hooded crows? I've only ever seen one chough and the was in Lytham St Annes of all places yet I've been to South Stack, a place well known for them, a few times. SS isn’t the most accessible RSPB for disabled people though, it is what it is and as an organisation the work hard making their sites disability friendly. I’m really interested in why you only ever find hooded them in such limited areas like both sides of the Irish boarder, IoM and a tiny bit of Scotland. I think choughs are even more limited. Also have you done videos on all six members of the thrush (turdus) family found in the U.K.? I know you’ve done blackbirds. An excellent video, thank you.
It’s a pity that in the area where I live - Southern Pennines - there don’t seem to be many of them about now. It seems to be Jackdaws and Magpies nowadays. There seems to have been a real shift, in this area, since the 1970s, but I’m not sure why. It’s lovely to see a Carrion Crow. I found a baby crow during the first lockdown. It was big but very light - like it was made of paper! It was a fledgeling and it was on a local pub’s car park. When it saw me it ran over to an old stone wall and stuck its head in a wide crack in the wall; it must have thought that if it couldn’t see me, then I couldn’t see it! Its mother was circling and squawking overhead. I picked it up - it was light as a feather - and I put it out of the way of any traffic and ‘yobs’, and then its mother sat in a tree above it and she went quiet. The funny thing was that when I was carrying it the 150 yards - or so - to safety, it was trying to have the best of both worlds: it was playing dead - that is what they do to make potential predators believe they’re dead, because dead carrion is not good for predators - but it was also gripping tightly onto my finger with its claws, to make sure that it didn’t fall out of my hands while I was carrying it. Animals and birds are just like children! I felt so protective of it. I hope it’s ok.
Thank you so much for your beautiful compassion and kindness in rescuing the baby crow. The world needs more people like YOU. I LOVE CROWS AND ALL BIRDS. 💕💕👍👍
Crows also have complex language. Crows have different warning calls, which people can also learn, for Foxes, Ravens, Cats, Buzzards, Humans,, Humans with gun. We had a wild born adult visually Crow, as a family pet, for just over 10 years. She learnt to understand some English phrases & questions, but would use Crow language & miming to communicate things with us. She regarded herself as equal to everybody in the family and enjoyed being petted by people. Crows are gentle & soppy birds, when domesticated, and soon figure out how to manipulate their humans.
Love crows. There's a huge tree in the field by our house with a huge crows nest. The magpies try to get into their nest but the crows always chase them away.
Brilliant Liam So many things I didn’t know - an amazing bird One think I learnt last year, while watching a Greylag Geese breeding population, is that Carrion Crows are also efficient predators - we’ve seen them attacking newly fledged Jackdaws but at our local lake, we watched a pair stalk and take a Gosling. This pair decimated the goslings over a period of time - any time the parents tried to move the young between lakes the pair were waiting. I’m going to try and film this in the Spring I did get a couple of grainy photos last year of a Crow taking a Gosling Anyway, great info - learnt a lot 👍👍👍👍 Dave H
My dad hates crows and magpies, he says they are destructive to other bird species, I think they even attack birds of prey like buzzards, kites and hawks when the crows are in groups, but I guess they are more defending their territory than attacking anything. I find them fascinating. Nature is nature, and is about survival of the fittest. Every animal has its place in nature.
Carrion crows hybridised with the hooded crows, the hooded crows will hybridise with most corvids, including Ravens.The carrion crows is often found in mixed flocks of hooded crows.
Thanks for this. I have problems with idiiot farmers who kill carrion crows and rooks during lambing time. They think corvids attack lambs if ewes don't protect them, whereas I reckon they only attack stillborns and lambs that'll die soon after birth because of some physiological issue....effectively cleaning up.
Love all your videos. I have a pair in the field behind the house, but don't know which is female and male. Would you know how to differentiate between both?
The crows near my home are very territorial. They harass the local foxes by swooping down on them and making very loud, aggressive cries to frighten them and other birds away.
Ah I had one of those shells on the floor near where I live, wondered who it belonged to. We have lots of crows nearby, must have fallen out once the chick had hatched 🙂
We have oak trees in our garden and crow’s always nest in every year, but last year neighbours cut their trees down and the crow’s haven’t been back, wondering if they ever will return…
My crows sometimes miss a year but then they come back. This year they had 3 kids and now all 5 are flying around, (I am blessed by living next to the churchyard of a 12 century church) , Like the Starlings , some years they come , others they don't. (In UK) when i am in US especially Arizona I can bring hundreds down from the sky with a packet of chips (Crisps). .
In Australia many bird species breed as families with the young remaining with the parents to raise the next generation. Evolutionarily this is known as "kin selection", promoting the reproduction of closely related individuals favours the genes you share with them. It is also a method allowing these birds to breed in poor environments, where the parents alone would struggle to find sufficient food to raise the young themselves.
My Parson Russell dog(Gus)had a crow as his friend. In summer they would lie sunbathing together. When I took Gus for a walk, the crow, whom I called Eric followed us everywhere. Often he would swoop down just above Gus and walk along the path through the woods just in front of us. My wife and I fed him for the last 6 years of Gus's life. Gus died in 2021. Yet Eric the crow still comes to us every day to be fed. He still likes to play with the squeaky rubber balls we bought for Gus. They used to both play with them in our garden. Eric recognises our car coming along the street. He sees it coming and lands on the fence at our driveway!
Thats a great story wish my dog was like that,i have a border terrier and he just wants to chase all the birds
Wonderful❤
Thats beautiful! Thanks for sharing
Had a crow for 25years as a pet (it couldn't t be returned to the wild )He was one of the most affectionate animals I have ever had.
We had a pet crow that lived with us when we were kids in the 70s, he had a damaged wing so couldn’t fly, he used to spend all his time with us in the car in the house, he was really friendly, his name was Charlie the crow.
I have the same at the moment, but with a pigeon. He got hit by a car. His name, funnily enough, is ‘pigeon.’ I tried for several weeks to get him flying again: I used to take him in a cardboard box to a nearby lawn. I used to throw him gently but as high as possible into the air, to try to get him to extend his damaged wing. He always used to crash-land. One day, I threw him up and, as usual, he crash-landed. He then gathered himself, walked over to his cardboard box and jumped back in it. I knew then that he was telling me in the only way that he could that he had given up and that he was not going to be able to fly again. It was a really sad moment for me. I decided that I would look after him for the rest of his life, and then I found out that in captivity pigeons can live until they are fifteen or more years old. He was less than a year old when I found him! He’s good company, though. Once you get to know a bird - even a pigeon - you start to realise just how intelligent they are and how loyal they are to you, too.
Same here lovely animals ,and much maligned
@@jimmyniland9721 same imaginative naming policy as Lards Animal Sanctuary
Aaaaah ! Awwwww!
@@jimmyniland9721Hope 'Pigeon' is doing well and enjoying life as best he can. It really is a privilege to have one of our feathered friends in your life.
A family friend had a crow he'd raised from a juvenile. He named it Chip, as in MyCrowChip. They were an unusual pair.
Excellent name for a pet, takes an interesting mind.
The Crow lifespan record is actually 57 years, for a pet Crow, which outlived 4 human companions.
Here in Berlin a hooded crow was given to animal welfare people because its owner had to move into a nursing home. This pet crow has a crippeled foot so it is very easy to regognize (and not just the last one in a series of pet crows). The relatives of the owner said that he had this crow for more than 40 (fourty) years. Mäxchen is still alive.
good video, I love crows, I'm being followed around by two crows for years. Feeding the birds has developed into
a loyal friendship. Very intelligent birds, they understand and can be trained. My two crows are the offspring of my
departed crows, which I buried a few years ago. I never let them inside the house, however I find it strange they stayed
close by until their death. Now the young crows left orphaned follow my car for miles while I'm out shopping.
They land when they see me stop, I buy them oat muffins, then sip my coffee. It's a strong bond.
I'm hoping more people will appreciate them more by having a relationship with nature, whereby spiritual connection can
be achieved for greater purpose and peace.
I started feeding a couple of them on my window ledge about a year ago, only now does the male stick around and peer at me through the window as I have a chat with him the female usually Just grabs the food and flys off mostly. Had a real hot day last week so I left some bread soaked with water and they were very happy.
And yes you feel the connection don't you it's a great feeling connecting with nature like that.
God Bless you I completely agree the spiritual connection to nature once achieved can never be broken, I wish many more humans would understand this 🕊🙏😇✝️💕
I am loving your videos. I already know a fair bit about corvids and you did a great job of making the crow seem less negative. Its such a shame as theyre clever, loyal and playful wee things and I love them. Corvids and foxes get such bad press!
True. It’s so typical of humans to demonise corvids, foxes, badgers, and many other animals, so they can persecute them.
Thank you for the crow video! Here in Canada we have the American Crow. In the northwest of Calgary, there has been seen a large group (100+) of crows that gathers in the fall and winter. This could be due to the interesting fact that crows will often congregate in large numbers (sometimes up to TWO MILLION!) in winter to sleep in communal roosts (Cornell University 2015). Some of these roosts have been established for 100 years or more, and will stay in an area even after it has become urbanized (Cornell University 2015).
I’ve got four crows I’ve been feeding for two years now they make sure I’m up early to give breakfast & every now & again they bring me a gift .
Crows are amazing birds .Glad you hi- lighted how they work so hard rearing and teaching The young birds can try it on by demanding and to watch the mum deal with this is unreal .All the corvid family are spectacular As is your video Many thanks and greetings ★.👍.
I live in rural France,, in southern Brittany (near Nantes). We have a big garden and are very close to a big forest. The bird life is amazing, I'm starting to think that the pigeons and crows have a deal to come and eat at ours seperately. One day I open the door and the garden is full of crows, the next, it's full of pigeons. We always throw our food scraps out on the lawn and get all sorts of birds coming for breakfast. Our resident robin tries to chase them off, whilst the cat and the dog sit by idly, watching! Mornings are magical, with a garden full of birds! I'm starting to feel that the birds recognise me now, know I'm not a threat and I can get quite close to them!
That was brilliant, thank you! There are countless weird, wonderful and amazing birds on the planet but my favourites are the Crow family; highly intelligent and such fantastic carachters, I love them all, Jackdaws, Crows, Rooks, Magpies, all of em.
Crows are beautiful birds too, especially close up. Also, very brave.
Brilliant video, I’ve only just discovered your channel and really like it 💚
Cheers. Stay tuned as there are loads more wildlife videos to come!
"Good work my feathered friend. Carry on crow !"
The most astonishing thing I've seen carrion crows do was a co-operative pizza liberation, from an overflowing bin, involving two birds hefting said food (a v large half pizza) back into its box, then several others jumping onto the sticking out bit of box, until, rather in the manner of a trebuchet, the pizza was flipped onto the ground, where they ate all the good bits, olives bacon &c and then abandoned it to the pigeons.. Very clever indeed, I thought.. 👍
This was an amazing video. I have lots of these beautiful birds visit my garden. It’s just made me love them even more. Thank you for sharing.
I love them, so clever and beautiful birds 🐦 😍 💕
And brave too 💪
Crows are very intelligent, and always out for what they can get. Much like humans.
After I fed the group near my house for a few months, they started to appear wherever I went. When I go to the shops, there's usually a crow perched on the roof watching. They're usually waiting for an opportune moment to come pester me for food. The other day I took my dog to the park and two crows waited patiently on the grass next to us while we finished our game of fetch. One time a crow even went into my backpack and took a piece of dog food!
Once you're labelled as a food source, it sticks 🙂 But they seem to be mostly polite about it.
@@Crow_Friend True! The old groups I used to feed a couple years ago still remember me! My local pair have gotten more and more bold in the past few months. Now they hang out on my balcony and watch me and my dog like we're TV 🙂
@@infinitusfinitus I expect they're telepathically conditioning you to feed them cashews and walnuts.
@@infinitusfinitus OHO! You have Crow and doggy vids, I subscribed 🙂
@@Crow_Friend I wouldn't be surprised. Sometimes they hang out on the roof across the road and 'gently' try to get my attention... and my monkey nuts. :D
The ability to recognise you is not restricted to carrion crows - at least in my experience, all from the crow family has this. Where I live, I usually greet the birds in a friendly tone when I see them, and I have noticed that after a while they don't flee anymore, but stay on the ground, even when I pass close by - as if they recognise that I am no threat - at least that is what I am making myself believe ;-)
I love watching crows. It's good to watch them figure stuff out. Very intelligent indeed.
I agree, I love watching them figure things out, you can almost see how their brains are working.
I love watching them too, funnily enough they also spend a lot of time watching us.
Why can't the rest of the internet be as good as this channel!
Thank you!
Thank you for this wonderful video. I love these birds and love to watch them. I hear them crow often. They are beautiful 💜😁
I'm glad you like them, lots of people don't.
Love crows❤️
I used to spend a lot of time on Bukemham Marsh ( near Norwich). It has the largest rookery,. thousands upon thousands roost there in winter. The murmurations are incredible
Great video! As An American, I watched this and other videos to compare the Carrion Crow to the American Crow. Of all crows, Carrion Crow seems the most simlar to the American Crow even more than other American species like the Fish Crow. The Carrion Crow is a slightly larger cousin, having a lower pitched voice but even gives the same rocking motion when calling. Both species even give the same rattling call. I'd love to get over to Europe to see these guys myself one day.
Amazing vid. Appreciate the work that went into this, beautiful birds. I just began friending a family. Fascinating animal
The other day a Carrion Crow I've got to know flew past my head to grab my attention ( nothing unusual with that ) and then flew to the top of a lamp post which I was walking towards - The Crow then pulled out one of its wing feathers and dropped it at my feet as I walked underneath it. It was a weird yet nice surprise. I took the feather as a souvenir.
Yet another great video! Just a suggestion; do you have (or might you possibly do) a video on the British Jay? The first time I saw one was only a few years ago (near Swansea, where I was living at the time), and didn't know what it was! But I was struck by how beautiful it was. I know it's a very nervous/skittish bird, as it would literally turn round in mid flight, if it saw me watching from the window as it flew past. 😀
Hello. I don't have a video completed of Jay's yet but they are on my hitlist. That'll be out in a few weeks :) I'm glad you found my channel and I hope you continue to enjoy it!
@@AShotOfWildlife Thanks, Liam! I'll look forward to that...in the meantime, I'll work my way through your other videos! All the best from South Wales! 😀👍
I found an injured crow ,I fed and nursed it , I freed it and it followed me to and from school for two years ,love em
Thank you so much for your beautiful compassion and kindness in helping the crow you found. They're my favorite birds of ALL.
☺☺💕💕
Thanks for this. I llive almost at the top of a hill in North London. Across the top of the hill is a line of enormous plane trees planted in the 1890s. They're occupied by carrion crows, magpies and other birds but the corvids dominate. They're fascinating to watch through binoculars from my balcony and are as you say really bright.
Crows do like to be at the highest point in their territory so they can lord it over their domain.
I don't know whats up with the magpies in my area but they love to mimic a car alarm and they like to mimic a call of a common gull
Thank you. That was a moment of pleasure in a crazy world. ❤️✌️
Love the carrion species, thanx for video
Cheers!
Thank you Liam. Another great video.
Thank you. Loads more to come so stay tuned :)
Thank you.
Your vids are brill
They are beautiful
Nice film about the Carrion Crows! Thanks for sharing Liam and have a good weekend! // Bertil.
I love corvids of all sorts. I swear one played peek a boo with me when landed behind a bin just out of sight. I got up and walked away ad turned to see it trying to see round the bin as if it was looking for me. I had told it off for trying to eat the contents of a dirty nappy bag.
Another epic Liam, nice one👍
Thanks Andy! Have a good weekend.
Love your videos. Thanks a million.
Thank you. I have a lot more lined up so stay tuned.
Another brilliant informative and cheerful production, loved it.
Fantastic birds.
Very interesting and informative. Clever birds!
I once had a pet crow, and I had a pet raven as well. The crow's bite wasnt bad, but that ravens bite was like a pair of pliers.
I often confuse carrion crows with ravens. I think I can differentiate them from their tail plumage in flight (still a bit unconvinced) and their calls …but therein lies the rub, both are great mimics. So calls are out of the picture. Ravens are very much larger than crows - I need crow and a raven side by side to judge size and in the distance that is impossible. Fortunately I love all corvids. Birds even. Still I have heard rumours that we have ravens on the farm we live on in Bedfordshire/ Cambridgeshire but I am not convinced until I can prove it for myself.
As for carrion crows and rooks - one key feature that I found easy to distinguish between them is that the rook has the naked beak reminiscent of a vulture whereas the crow has a more “polished” looking beak. Unscientific, I know but that helped me a lot.
Another great video full of interesting facts and lovely footage!
I saw some crows having a carry on outside my front window yesterday!
Once again thank for a lovely presentation
I have a rescue crow that now won’t leave she is so friendly to me but hubby is not that welcome and they are very intelligent as you said. Excellent video 👍
Show him this video help him to change his mind about them.
@@connorb2112 hi sorry didn’t quite understand your reply but my crow doesn’t tolerate my husband being in the aviary next to me she gets jealous my crow only wants to be with me so I understand crows are like my geese a pair for life and poor hubby even though he looked after Munnin the crow he’s not part of the family it’s just me and Munnin 👍
Brilliant. Loved every second. Next to my parrots, the corvids really are my next favourites. 🥰🇨🇦
An excellent channel ,,,,, enjoy it a lot thanks
Thanks John, I'm glad to hear it.
I can see these videos being really interesting to non birders bringing them into the brethren. So many people think we only boring birds without colour and not worth looking at compared to other countries. Yet we have an amazing array of beautiful colourful birds and even more diverse behaviours. If we can get more people interested in birds, then more will be interested in the environment as a whole.
Whilst doing crows will you be covering choughs and hooded crows? I've only ever seen one chough and the was in Lytham St Annes of all places yet I've been to South Stack, a place well known for them, a few times. SS isn’t the most accessible RSPB for disabled people though, it is what it is and as an organisation the work hard making their sites disability friendly. I’m really interested in why you only ever find hooded them in such limited areas like both sides of the Irish boarder, IoM and a tiny bit of Scotland. I think choughs are even more limited.
Also have you done videos on all six members of the thrush (turdus) family found in the U.K.? I know you’ve done blackbirds.
An excellent video, thank you.
Really enjoyable videos. Thanks.
Cheers! Lots more others on their way :)
Excellent,clear and concise.
I Love Crows!
Me too! 🙂
It’s a pity that in the area where I live - Southern Pennines - there don’t seem to be many of them about now. It seems to be Jackdaws and Magpies nowadays. There seems to have been a real shift, in this area, since the 1970s, but I’m not sure why. It’s lovely to see a Carrion Crow.
I found a baby crow during the first lockdown. It was big but very light - like it was made of paper! It was a fledgeling and it was on a local pub’s car park. When it saw me it ran over to an old stone wall and stuck its head in a wide crack in the wall; it must have thought that if it couldn’t see me, then I couldn’t see it! Its mother was circling and squawking overhead. I picked it up - it was light as a feather - and I put it out of the way of any traffic and ‘yobs’, and then its mother sat in a tree above it and she went quiet. The funny thing was that when I was carrying it the 150 yards - or so - to safety, it was trying to have the best of both worlds: it was playing dead - that is what they do to make potential predators believe they’re dead, because dead carrion is not good for predators - but it was also gripping tightly onto my finger with its claws, to make sure that it didn’t fall out of my hands while I was carrying it. Animals and birds are just like children! I felt so protective of it. I hope it’s ok.
Thank you so much for your beautiful compassion and kindness in rescuing the baby crow. The world needs more people like YOU.
I LOVE CROWS AND ALL BIRDS. 💕💕👍👍
This one slipped in under my radar when it was published so well done for the little plug on FB. 👍🙂👍
Fantastic birds, thank you for the great video.
Great channel! Thank you for all the fascinating info. I love them and find them so interesting to watch.
Thank you so much lovely lad. ❤❤❤
Cheers!
Great video! I see them a lot along the canal near where I live, they swoop down and pinch the food that people feed the geese.
They are very smart. Did you notice the one in this video soaking some bread before eating it?
@@AShotOfWildlife yep I noticed I've seen them dip bread in water a few times and make some bizarre noises sounds like they're laughing at the geese.
Crows also have complex language. Crows have different warning calls, which people can also learn, for Foxes, Ravens, Cats, Buzzards, Humans,, Humans with gun.
We had a wild born adult visually Crow, as a family pet, for just over 10 years. She learnt to understand some English phrases & questions, but would use Crow language & miming to communicate things with us. She regarded herself as equal to everybody in the family and enjoyed being petted by people. Crows are gentle & soppy birds, when domesticated, and soon figure out how to manipulate their humans.
i really enjoyed this video. super informative , as always. i always look forward to seeing what you will share with us. keep up the great work 😀
Cheers. Next up could be another single species fact file or perhaps a visit to the ciat birdwatching. I'll decide later on :)
Many thanks Liam, another fascinating peep at corvids! :)
Great vid. Very informative.
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it!
I very often see Crows come out and attack Buzzards when they come too near to the Crow's nesting spot.
Brilliant!
Thank you!
Love crows. There's a huge tree in the field by our house with a huge crows nest. The magpies try to get into their nest but the crows always chase them away.
Crows hate magpies.
Brilliant Liam
So many things I didn’t know - an amazing bird
One think I learnt last year, while watching a Greylag Geese breeding population, is that Carrion Crows are also efficient predators - we’ve seen them attacking newly fledged Jackdaws but at our local lake, we watched a pair stalk and take a Gosling.
This pair decimated the goslings over a period of time - any time the parents tried to move the young between lakes the pair were waiting. I’m going to try and film this in the Spring
I did get a couple of grainy photos last year of a Crow taking a Gosling
Anyway, great info - learnt a lot 👍👍👍👍
Dave H
Crows are amazing intelligent creatures 😍
Crow comes daily for my cats biscuits...love seeing him
Very intelligent birds and fiercely protective of their young, have seen them fighting off Red Kites.
I love crows
Good stuff thank you 👍
Corvids are my favourites. I have a mad rook that miaouws. My greatest honour was when a pair set up a nest in my garden.
I would be honoured to have crows set up their nest in my yard too.
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE CROWS. ☺☺👍👍
Awesome 😎 thank you
Thank you!
One of my other favourite birds. Theres a couple that live near me on a rooftop and if I talk to them they walk off.
Big like 👍
Great work
Very interesting thanks 😊
My dad hates crows and magpies, he says they are destructive to other bird species, I think they even attack birds of prey like buzzards, kites and hawks when the crows are in groups, but I guess they are more defending their territory than attacking anything. I find them fascinating. Nature is nature, and is about survival of the fittest. Every animal has its place in nature.
Great videos
Thankyou so much for this.
good little summary
The crow we raised is about 4yrs old now and always brings his family around for feeding. They sit outside the window until we notice them.
I live in the US so we have American crows but I have been to the Netherlands and Switzerland so I’ve seen these guys
Carrion crows hybridised with the hooded crows, the hooded crows will hybridise with most corvids, including Ravens.The carrion crows is often found in mixed flocks of hooded crows.
Excellent video Liam, loved it very informative.......
Cheeky lil things 🤗🤗❣
Nice one
I once saw a carrion crow sitting on an oak watching a tailor, doing nothing in particular!
Thanks for this. I have problems with idiiot farmers who kill carrion crows and rooks during lambing time. They think corvids attack lambs if ewes don't protect them, whereas I reckon they only attack stillborns and lambs that'll die soon after birth because of some physiological issue....effectively cleaning up.
👍🏻 birds. Got a pair nesting 🪹 next 🚪 to my back garden 🪴 in a 🌲
Love all your videos. I have a pair in the field behind the house, but don't know which is female and male. Would you know how to differentiate between both?
In a pair, the male is nearly always larger.
The crows near my home are very territorial. They harass the local foxes by swooping down on them and making very loud, aggressive cries to frighten them and other birds away.
I used to shoot crows, but now I love them. They are intelligent and funny birds and once they start to trust you, they are good friends.
I'm glad you stopped doing that....
Ah I had one of those shells on the floor near where I live, wondered who it belonged to. We have lots of crows nearby, must have fallen out once the chick had hatched 🙂
We have oak trees in our garden and crow’s always nest in every year, but last year neighbours cut their trees down and the crow’s haven’t been back, wondering if they ever will return…
My crows sometimes miss a year but then they come back. This year they had 3 kids and now all 5 are flying around, (I am blessed by living next to the churchyard of a 12 century church) , Like the Starlings , some years they come , others they don't. (In UK) when i am in US especially Arizona I can bring hundreds down from the sky with a packet of chips (Crisps). .
In Australia many bird species breed as families with the young remaining with the parents to raise the next generation. Evolutionarily this is known as "kin selection", promoting the reproduction of closely related individuals favours the genes you share with them.
It is also a method allowing these birds to breed in poor environments, where the parents alone would struggle to find sufficient food to raise the young themselves.
Fabulous