Piling wrote:It seems to have a wounded wing. Still drinks, not eat.
If it survives but can't fly anymore, what am I going to do with THAT ? Pirouette will kill it.
https://www.facebook.com/sandrine.alexi ... nref=story
I think it is a young Kurdish 'kotr'.
Kurds here LOVE birds. I think I could find a house for it, if it can't fly anymore.
Londoner wrote:This reminds me with myself when I found a pigeon chick on the road, fallen from the nest, which was very high. I took it home and force-fed it with soaked bread. After a few days, she learnt to help herself to eat. We were living on the fourth floor of a council housing. she grew up and became domesticated. She was coming back every night. The following year, she found a partner and made a nest on the balcony. Her partner also became domesticated. He was coming inside to look for food and was protecting the balcony from other pigeons. They made two chicks. Before they grew up we left. I don't know what happened to them after that.
Londoner wrote:Dear Piling I think this pigeon had a sort of shock. This is why it doesn't fly. But gradually it will. This is a domesticated type. I don't think it will go away when flies.
Piling wrote:Well if it does not want to leave, I will find it an owner, or it will have many shocks again when Pirouette catches it.
Piling wrote:I think that the only activity of a pigeon is to eat and poo. It does both very well, in all parts of the room.
Piling wrote:ISIS states that breeding pigeons is un-islamic. I wonder what they accept, in life.
Registered users: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot]