Photo by Melanie Piazza
At WildCare right now we have 26 orphaned baby American Crows in care. When they're young, these curious, quizzical, uncoordinated babies have light blue eyes and bright pink mouths, and they really are some of our most charming patients.
To get them ready for their future lives as wild crows, one of the most important jobs we have at WildCare is to teach these babies the skills they'll need to survive in the wild.
The first step in that process is to get them eating on their own instead of needing us to feed them every few hours (or every 45 minutes, in the case of our tiniest baby crows.)
Watch our video as WildCare's Director of Animal Care, Melanie Piazza, demonstrates how we get these incredibly intelligent (and delightfully uncooperative!) birds to figure out how to find food on their own.
Learn more, and watch our VIDEO of these funny blue-eyed babies being fed...
To get them ready for their future lives as wild crows, one of the most important jobs we have at WildCare is to teach these babies the skills they'll need to survive in the wild.
The first step in that process is to get them eating on their own instead of needing us to feed them every few hours (or every 45 minutes, in the case of our tiniest baby crows.)
Watch our video as WildCare's Director of Animal Care, Melanie Piazza, demonstrates how we get these incredibly intelligent (and delightfully uncooperative!) birds to figure out how to find food on their own.
Learn more, and watch our VIDEO of these funny blue-eyed babies being fed...
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