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Kitchen Syringe

Kitchen SyringeA wild bird was being attacked by blue jays and I saved him / her. What to feed young thing?

The little birds drink water from a rubber thingie kitchen syringe. The Fins Mushed up wheat in water does not matter. Before chopping the worm, is it useful?

If I took a guess, I would say that the bird could be a starling. It's too big to be a sparrow, and I see the young Robins and blackbirds and about with their moms. This little guy is so dark and grand, but still down and lose just developing feathers. It does not move much at all, and it has some small scratches from the pounding he took Blue Jays. Generally, I let water rest and feed.

When I was a kid, I would have found baby birds fallen from nests. I feed the birds bread dipped in egg yolk at room temperature. I feed them with tweezers. as they began to feather I started to have some bugs and worms chop. It is an endless process, but they can survive. The hardest part is when they are ready to leave the nest. The birds continue to care for their babies, even after leaving the nest. For a moment, the parent will continue to feed the baby and lead them around places good to eat. I often lost my baby at this stage because they drown in a bird bath or just sit in the tree back and not moving. They end up getting eaten anyway or do not know what to do once released. So, keep it for life or you need to let it be devoured.

warms

We feed them white bread that had been soaked in milk, success has been very hit or miss though.

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You are doing a great job, continue to feed the worms on a pair of plastic or rubber should be tweezers.Water body temperature, with a small amount of glucose every 2-3 days for extra energy. You are now parents. Congratulations.Keep posted.Let we take the water at its own pace so it does not panic.

I would give him to eat worms, but not all rice or fruit. So I contact the local conservation agency and ask them

Contact a wildlife rehabilitator licensed. You can find here: ~ devo0028/contact http://www.tc.umn.edu/. ...

They have the training to care for sick, injured or orphaned wild animals.

Do not try to take care of this bird yourself. If you do not have the training, you can do more harm than good, and the forms and get advice on the Internet is a poor substitute for real training.

Do not feed bread, it has no real nutrition and bread and milk both contain things that are difficult for birds to digest properly. Do not give water. chicks can suck and die. They get their fluids from their food.

I used to raise chicks in a veterinarian who was a licensed wildlife rehabber. I fed them high-quality canned kitten food (like Iams, Eukaneuba, Science Diet, etc.) until they are old enough to begin learning to catch bugs. I had the highest rate of success of any person who has ever done for him.

Feed small pieces of canned kitten food with tweezers every 2-3 hours. After a moment, the bird learns to eat food from a dish.

feed a cat

Posted on March 21, 2010.
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