https://youtu.be/cva6TH-yoJQ
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https://youtu.be/cva6TH-yoJQ
Sent from my Redmi 3S using Tapatalk
Dragonlady2 (08-15-2017)
I also cannot watch this. What is the value of showing a lone bird being potentially attacked by a flock of crows? I would have intervened immediately.
How easily you can say, you can intervened, it's a lone bird who entered a unknown space which apparently have crows nests and all these crows permanently lives there.
I wanted to see how they react to someone trespassing through there living area. And the video is for 2 min but it took almost 45 min for parrot to gain courage to leave their vicinity and I was there guarding him from the crows and not recording it.
Please try to observe and understand the context of video.
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The title of this thread indicates that a flock of crows had "captured" a white parrot. You gave no further explanation in your post so there was no "context" for me to view it. The opening scene is of a lone cockatoo on a branch with crows coming at him from all sides. I am not going to watch a video which potentially could lead to injury or death of any bird.
plax (08-15-2017)
I viewed the full clip and no physical harm was inflicted upon the cockatoo. The OP indicates that it ultimately escaped. And yes, Helena... descriptions are very important. I've changed the thread's subject title accordingly.
He wanted to live. He was my Heaven... He's gone!
Dragonlady2 (08-15-2017)
Dragonlady2 (08-15-2017), plax (08-15-2017)
Dragonlady2 (08-15-2017)
I wonder how afraid the cockatoo was, they are normally pretty feisty and it doesn't seem too concerned. If it was, he/she would have flown away.
More like scenario: Cockatoo decides to annoy crows knowing that they are too afraid to actually try and attack.
"A busy beak is a happy beak" - David Strom
Dragonlady2 (08-15-2017), Lady (08-19-2017), Mare (08-31-2017), plax (08-15-2017), Quakerella (08-15-2017)
Dragonlady2 (08-15-2017)