Crafty Crows Doing Their "Hook" Alarm Body Language

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  • Опубликовано: 18 июн 2023
  • Did you know crows have a silent alarm communication that uses body language rather than cawing sounds? They use this alarmed body language in many situations including against owls, hawks, eagles, cats, ravens & other crows.
    Learn to recognize this body language and crows will lead you to discover many secret animals hiding in the landscape.
    If you want to learn more about crows, check out my crow language home study course: nature-mentor.com/crow-langua...
    Thanks for watching!
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Комментарии • 13

  • @sky37blue
    @sky37blue 10 месяцев назад +4

    I'm in Scotland and have been feeding the crows every day outside for about a year. Anyway, a few months ago at the start of summer there were small songbirds around. I heard the crow who nests in a tree right outside my flat (apartment for Americans lol) cawing really loudly.
    I opened the kitchen window and took a look outside, the downstairs neighbour's cat had one of these songbirds in its mouth and the crow was cawing at it. I looked at the crow on my gutter and the crow looked at me then started tapping its beak on the gutter then looked back at me then cawed loudly at the cat. I then began to make noises at the cat with my mouth which the cat ignored. After doing this a few times and the crow tapping the gutter then looking at me I decided I should be louder and clapped my hands instead.
    This worked, the cat got a shock, dropped the songbird which immediately escaped (with the crow shooting off rapidly to chase it).
    It dawned on me later....did the crow just teach me how to get the cat the cat to drop the songbird?

    • @NatureMentor
      @NatureMentor  10 месяцев назад +1

      Great story! Part of the intent with those scolding calls is to attract other birds and animals to help make life more difficult for the predator. So while those calls weren't specifically directed towards you alone... that is essentially what the crow was saying! Thanks for sharing

    • @julesgray810
      @julesgray810 10 месяцев назад

      Wow, what an interesting experience. I notice in your story that the sound of a hand clap is more similar to the sound of a beak tap on a gutter. So since your initial instinct failed in effectiveness, perhaps subconsciously you utilized the part of your body which could create a louder sharper sound. Nobody can know for sure what actually the crow intended vs what you received, but perhaps if you observe any more crows responding to a feline predator with sharp sounds, it could be a direct communication

  • @concertinamadrigals4058
    @concertinamadrigals4058 Год назад +5

    I've seen this behaviour a few times in the past couple of weeks. A young eagle keeps perching atop buildings beside my workplace, and the crows put on quite the show. My co-workers often so what they're doing to watch

    • @NatureMentor
      @NatureMentor  Год назад +1

      That's awesome! Thanks for sharing 🙂

  • @MichaelMantion
    @MichaelMantion Год назад +2

    remember a group of crows is called a murder.

  • @stormthetawnyowl.2348
    @stormthetawnyowl.2348 Год назад +3

    Hey great videos 👍 I’ve recently found a rookery near me (chorley U.K.) there fantastic to watch ,chattering away you get the sense that there one big family there amazing , thanks for your vids ! And good luck 🤞

  • @JNosewicz7569
    @JNosewicz7569 5 месяцев назад +1

    I saw this exact behavior a couple months ago in the orchard behind my house. They were very noisy so i looked around and it was all because a hawk was cruising by above them.

    • @NatureMentor
      @NatureMentor  5 месяцев назад

      Very cool, thanks for sharing!

  • @EllenDahl-sp1sw
    @EllenDahl-sp1sw Год назад +1

    Yes they are very territorial and have no fear..a huge great black hawk came all my ravens sat near it they were 1/3 of its size..I was afraid for them at first .the hawk eventually left

    • @NatureMentor
      @NatureMentor  Год назад +1

      Yeah they get pretty close sometimes, but they definitely seem to know the limits of their targets. Thanks for sharing!

  • @xanpena2858
    @xanpena2858 Год назад

    There's this crow that constantly shows up at my upstairs balcony yelling and pecking at the windows. He does this every evening. Why do you think that is? I go outside to see him away sometimes and he goes into a tree and continues to yell at me lol