Thank you for watching this video! If you would like to support the channel even more, please consider my Patreon which can be found here> www.patreon.com/ashotofwildlife
Things you need to know about BLACKBIRDS! 0940am 25.7.24 males are black with yellow eye liner...females totally brown and drab. which is not how it works with humanity - the women are the ones who are supposed to preen and flounce about in their finery....they seem to do their thing 24/7. i used to think it must be a nightingale making all that racket as i walked home from pub but it was always the blackbird chattering away and grubbing about it the undergrowth.... i wondered if they were just as nasty as the excellent and mighty robin?
You don’t mention how intelligent they are, them and thrushes tap the grass or soil to encourage worms to rise to the surface. I’ve seem magpies mimic them doing this.
Hearing Blackbirds singing in the morning, you know spring is here! I remember during Covid when we had lockdown, i was a key worker and walking to work and back, that's all i could hear, Blackbirds everywhere, it was a joy to hear, it brighten up some dark days/weeks the country was going though!
I totally adore blackbirds. Their singing is one of the most beautiful sounds on earth, especially at dusk when they sit on rooftops and have lengthy and intent conversations with one specific peer some houses further on. Moments like that, especially when there's no human noise to interfere, I feel as if all is well with the world.
@@pigmentpeddler5811 Sorry I thought this video was about blackbirds, Then I saw your picture and realised it must be about fat, ugly, disgusting pigs instead, my apologies. Top tip - try turning your air rifle around - the world likes a bit of gammon
I found a beaten up, one-eyed, female blackbird chick when i was 12. I raised her and kept her as a pet and she got really tame, hopping on my fingers, sleeping on my belly while i was watching tv and so on. She never flew, though, and i found her dead when she was about 4 years old. I'm really grateful for the time with her.
Awesome , i noticed its the same birds that land in that same place around the same time, birds like black birds starlings, sparrow's etc its the same birds ,they have territories
I had a blackbird friend. He was so smart, he used to leave his youngs in my garden while my partner was complaining, "This is not a kinder garden" 😊😊😊. My friend bird one day didn't come back. I still miss him. He used to come to me on the bench where I was scaping from the world and having a cigarette. I was an honor, my little friend.
@@andriesscheper2022 Chill out. 99.99% of us don't and never will have oystercatchers singing in our gardens...pretty clear to the vast majority of people I'd imagine that the author of the comment was referring to garden birds.
My blackbirds have lived in my garden for the last 20years the male of the original pair is still alive... His off spring are prolific in reproduction... The old male is still trying to hold his own and is so tame he wonders in my kitchen and even the dog takes no notice of him..... I feel very privileged to have been apart of this birds life sultanas are his favourite and he demands them everyday by pecking at the backdoor..... Just to let everyone know ERIC. MY blackbird died this summer 2023 he is now buried in my garden that he loved so much.. He had a very long happy life with us. RIP my sweet little friend 🙏😢🌹
@@shamrockisland yes it's seems so,,,,, he's a bit bedraggled his wings ara a bit droopy and he doesn't fight with the younger ones any more.. I think it's the safety of our walled garden and sultanas as a main diet keep him going... he is a lovely old thing.... and expect I will find him dead one day but that's life....When that time comes I will bury him of. Course in the garden he's guarded and loved for so many years... His off spring live on and are with us everyday 💕🕊️
I dont want to doubt you but Wiki ( that fountain of knowledge) says an average blackbird lives 3.4 years and the oldest recorded is about 21 years. Are you sure its the same bird, lol?
Would that be the same god that blessed us with Onchocerca volvulus? I say us but that particular blessing is reserved mostly, though not entirely, to the residents of Africa. Perhaps their lives are of less concern to the Lord. I understand your sentiment on seeing natural wonders, but if you are going to start praising the Lord, remember some of his other works. The hymn all things bright and beautiful should contain a few darker verses for balance. He gave us Yersinia pestis, and tuberculosis too.
@@PifflePrattle Disease, nasty plants/animals and death only came into the world after Adam sinned. Before that time, God had created a perfect world. Genesis 1:31 "God saw all that he had made, and it was very good"
Blackbirds are truly smart. I just love them. And beautiful & caring to their young. Big respect. And to all birds. The world is so much better with them.
One thing I love about these birds is it is always the first one awake that you hear, and always the last in the evening to go to bed that you hear. Such beautiful birds
I rescued a young blackbird from a cat in 2012, and now 10 years later (and a house move! We moved about a block and she found me again) she's still with us. It's been really neat to see her find a husband and raise their clutches every year- and shriek excitedly when I go outside in case I might have food for them. When I'm gardening, I have a dish that I chuck any undesirable bugs into and she/the husband are quite confidant in running up to me to eat them.
Toxoplasma Gondii (Most prolific parasite known to mankind) & an estimated over 275-million small animals and birds tortured to death every year in the U.K. Cats are disgusting. You'd think any decent human being would stay well clear of them.... Knowing the excrement and urine they will be producing on their neighbour's property.. just proves how horrible we all are.
Blackbird's song always strikes me as one of the most beautiful things on this planet. It is especially touching when it bounces off echoey city walls. Interesting fact: these vocalizations have localized characteristics, just like human languages and dialects.
I had a cock blackbird who mimicked my pet cockatiel who he could hear in our front room. He also had absorbed the sound of the nearby corner shop’s alarm going off.
They're so cute 🖤 I love everything about them, their wonderful songs, their hasty demeanor, the way they rummage through fallen leaves to find insects, the intensity with which they bathe, projecting water everywhere lol, and simply their perfect shape and cute face. I love all birds but these ones have a special place in my heart 🥰
Thats nice. I am a big fan of blackbirds too. Its great that something which is perhaps a bit less colourful than most birds still has a lot of appreciation!
@soifpls Same here!!! :) last winter a blackbird honoured me with his presence on my balcony day after day. i can't tell you how grateful I am to hear someone else say they find them CUTE!! Bill - as I named him - really was so stinkin fluffy and cute I loved him. Hope he's alright wherever winds have blown him :')
@@azrani2023 the fluffier the better !! There's a whole family of blackbirds in my garden (I've seen a couple of times an adult male surrounded by 4 juveniles) and one of the babies is so ROUND and fluffy 😍 he seems to really enjoy the apples ! I hope Bill is safe and healthy (he probably is ! Blackbirds are clever and extra cautious !) 🤗
@@soifpls your reply brought yet another smile to my face! i can totally picture that fluffball in your garden to be the cutest thing 😍 all the best to you!
We have lots of blackbirds and the same family lines for many years, I had a tame one I rescued and she used to go everywhere with me and would happily go in the car and she used to love going in the tractor through the roof and sitting on the dashboard, she bought her young to see me on the ground where I misted them with water and they washed and played; I had her for 7 years until the bad winter got her and I still miss shouting her in the morning for her corn flakes and bowl of water on the kitchen table for her breakfast.
I picked up a baby blackbird a few years ago and it was injured,a vet gave me some powder to sprinkle under its wing.. I tried to get it to fly away but it wouldn't go it lived indoors,then one day after nearly 2 years it decided to go.I felt very privileged to have had the pleasure it brought me.😊
I once had the chance to see a nesting pair from my window during the holidays. I saw the chicks from being blue eggs to the last one leaving the nest. Since than, they have a special place in my heart.
Wonderful little singers, when I used to work nights, we had a blackbird who would sing constantly outside the factory. Great to listen to when we went outside for our breaks.
My favourite bird, purely because how curious they are. They don’t seem to be scared of humans that much, and seem to watch us a lot. Beautiful song too.
We live in Germany and I love the blackbirds. They’re called “Amsel” in German. We always have a pair or two nesting in our garden in the hedges. One year we had a paIr right next to the front door. They got used to our comings and goings and 3 lovely plump fledgelings made it to adulthood. Right now, we have a pair nesting right next to our terrace. And another pair further away in the garden. I often see one of the males bathing in our pond. Most entertaining they are.
We have blackbirds that work through a repertoire of what sound like mobile phone ring tones. These include sirens, alarms, old style phone trills and other mobile phone sounds.
Wow! I have Blackbirds that live locally. Every Spring the male sings to me, and I sing back lol. I never thought that it would be the same one in successive years.
We did rescue an adult male with a damaged wing. He can’t fly. We knew fish and game department would euthanize him, so he happily lives with us. He seems content and very glad to see us in the morning. Thanks for an informative video.
@@theeroom sorry to hear about the injury. If she can stand on the leg, you might support wrap it. Having 2 injuries is a tough challenge to overcome. We treated Rusty's wing wound with Vetricin and it healed, but couldn't re-set his wing. We had him for about a year Sadly, about 10 days ago he died. It was worth it to give him a chance. He became a happy friend. Who knows how old he was.
@@bitbybitfarmseast3085 the same black bird in my garden has been there since i moved in 6yrs ago , it has a distinct ''wuppididy doo '' sounding call song & adds a touch of car alarm / ring tone to his calls , so i know its the same bird
My favourite bird ! About 11 years ago, I met my first BB, a male, in one of my shrubs. I did some potting close by when I heard him softly singing. I tried to mimic his song, and he always replied. We became close, and often sing for hours in a duet. I noticed that BBs learn new songs by taking on sounds not only from other BBs, but also from the environment. My BB took on some melodies from me, and he also imitated car alarms! Every BB has its specific songs. I could easily tell, if “my” BB was close by. He LOVED mealworms soaked in water. I also offered him several water trays in various sizes. The large ones he used for bathing. Sadly, after a few years, he did not come back into my garden anymore. I fear one of the many cats killed him, as he was more than 8 years old by then and much slower moving (needless to say, I cannot stand cat owners who let their cats outside to roam around in the neighbourhood). I miss him terribly.
Our tame Blackbird is 8 years old. We feed him currants & sultanas all year round and he behaves like a pet. He is larger than the average Blackbird. During the breeding season the currants & sultanas are marinated in water, to swell them up for the chicks, as he is constantly at the kitchen window or next to me, in the garden, asking for food. During the moulting season he hangs out in the garden and we feed him, whenever he asks. He likes my company and will hang out with me, settling down inches away,, burbling quietly to me, if I'm in the garden. He likes to be talked to.
I have just spent the week with some friends of mine in Rayleigh, Essex. They have a black female cat which has started spending more time in their garden where a pair of blackbirds have nested in a bush. I was worried about the situation but to my astonishment, during one afternoon in the garden, the cock bird showed incredible bravery and literally chased the terrified cat back indoors. I love blackbirds anyway but I have even more admiration for them after this incident.
I once watched my cat eat a whole blackbird in one go, minus the head 😕 all those feathers 🤢 and toward the end i could see its foot sticking out of his mouth 😂
@@thenoobalmighty8790 😢 Mine killed a blckbird once too. Didn't eat it though. Why couldn't he have nicked one of those agressive magpies, or annoying doves ?
We had a pair of Blackbirds that had a failed nest and the need to feed young was so strong that they fed the young Robins that were also nesting in our garden , we had very big Robins.
Blackvirds are my favourite birds. Their song is sooo beautiful and I love the cute orange beak and eyering. In winter I was so happy hearing the blackbird everyday after sunset, it made the season way less depressing.
A beautiful bird with a song that relaxes the soul. I have one that comes up to my window & looks in to see if I am in my chair to give him food, sometimes when I don't see him, he will knock on the window & run to his position under the window for food. A very nervous bird though, but beautiful.
I made friends with a blackbird around 2005 by feeding him raisins. He came back multiple times a day for months. My Mum named him Fred. He was a lovely character. He even used to land on the window cill behind me whilst I was eating my dinner at the table. When he landed behind me, I heard a light sound, and my family would say that Fred was knocking on the window for his dinner 😄
i had a female blackbird last year, that no matter what time in the morning i got up, within seconds she would be on the kitchen door handle waiting for me to let her in, i have footage on my youtube, also slow motion birds flying out of my kitchen straight at me
Writing from North Island NZ. I shared my garden with female blackbird for over 10 years. Fiercely protective about her "patch" and chased off her babies once they could look after themselves. One day she allowed her daughter to stay with her for a couple of days and then she flew off down into the wooded bushland and I never saw her again. Her daughter took over her patch and now she has gone and the garden is shared with her daughter (and male partner).
We have a couple in our cabbage tree (Invercargill) - he's ripping up moss at the moment (presumably to get bugs) - now that I know they switch diets, I'll start putting wild bird seed out
@@angeladawn805 They don't eat the wild bird food I put out but love the sultanas from a separate dish. They along with waxeyes and other birds are always at a small dish of fresh mixed berry jam and water. Fluids are also important especially during summer.
I befriended a blackbird at work through feeding it scraps of my breakfast and topping up a bowl with fresh water every morning. Seeds, berries, fruit, nuts, oats, bits of bread etc. It got to the point where he'd come flying down a minute or two after he heard the door closing as I came out of the workshop and would land right beside me on the bench. I was even able to hand-feed him a couple of times. This happened every morning, Monday to Friday, for almost a year until I changed jobs. Still sometimes think of the little fella!
Had an injured one, stay with me for a couple of weeks. He seemed a little reluctant to leave, and would happily take worms etc from my hand. When he did eventually fly off, i've never been as pleased to see him recovered, and off to get on with his life again.
I adore the Black bird, I had one as a garden pet named ‘Tommy’ who would visit me every day for 5 years, Tommy used to fly down and sit beside me most days when I fed him. He knew his name, then one day he never came back. I miss him dearly ❤️. New Zealand.
Marlena , I truly believe that those who touch our hearts, be it bird, animals or human we shall meet them again and they will know us, love is eternal xx
@@LittleBird777 Yes Georgina I couldn’t agree with you more. We are the caretakers for our animals be it domestic or wild they bring their special energies to the planet and humanity. ❤️🌟❤️
Lovely to see the comments below of the joy which blackbirds have brought so many people. I have always found the males to be more tame than the females, and just love the variety of song and melody during the long summer evenings. I particularly love how they know how to attract our attention and when they bring their offspring along and feed them in front of us.
In 1800 these birds were shy and staid away from human beings. Now they are forced to settle among us... Even in my time Eurasian Jay has changed from extremely shy to comfortable with human beings.
@@OmmerSysselThat is very interesting., Ommer. I have often thought similar things about bird behaviour changing over time. I'm inclined to think sparrows are bold and cheerful when there are lots of them together, but when their numbers decline (as they have around here due to nearly the whole street ripping up their gardens and concreting them over for their cars), they seem nervous and inclined to hide.
Also, Blackbirds recognise habits quite easily, like if you feed them at specific times. I have 3 pairs that visit my garden at different times of day, & the females will actually call for me to scatter the mealworms if I'm late. They are very friendly & trusting birds, & I feel honoured they have chose my garden to frequent.
A couple of springs ago one of the blackbirds in our back garden would sing a tune which started with a catchy ‘ jingle ‘ of separate notes or chirps - followed by a lot of extremely quick ones. After hearing this same tune repeated for a week or so I would mimic the first catchy bit which to my surprise was returned immediately ! This carried on throughout the summer when going into the garden. The following year I listened out for the familiar tune but they didn’t appear to re use that sequence of notes - so I was patient for a few weeks but it wasn’t used - so I whistled it at them. A while later my tune was copied by the blackbirds - and they haven’t stopped using it ……I love them . One has an unusual white patch of feather colour on her / his head 👍 many thanks for your work from near the western coast of new forest
Theres one of these birds I keep seeing in my garden and about the town. It has a broken leg, I found it amazing how it was able to keep going on one leg. It sits on fences and lets me walk up pretty close for a look, just sits and looks back at me. I've now noticed that it has a missing tail, it's flying about the place like a delta wing plane. Poor thing has had a tough time, but is still going.
Ive had a pet blackbird called Turdis in NZ, he proudly brought his baby thrush to see me in the garage when he was teaching her to fly. He was always with her until she went off presumably to find a suitable male & marry. They are amazingly clever birds but he was real special to us as our first real interactive wild bird.
They are problem in my vege garden. Pulling out seedlings, burying small plants when digging deep, nipping corn as it pops out of soil. We have to use netting to keep them away. They are good singers but not as good as the garden thrush I reckon
I love that they keep my veggie patches free of slugs while not touching any of the veggies themselves! They do make a “mess” sometimes but nothing that can’t be quickly tidied up and I’m so grateful! I also love how loud they sing at sunset!
I've moved over to northeastern Scotland three years ago from upstate New York. It seemed like everything including cards was all about the Robin. The Robin is cute and adorable but it doesn't hold a candle to my black birds. They are absolutely my favourite bird over in this country. They have such a beautiful song. I sit in my shed with the door open and put some food down on the ground for them and they are there within minutes and they are fearless both the male and the female, as l am a mere 5ft away from them. They look right at me and are not afraid. I think that they're the highest on the pecking order because that is the first bird that I hear in the morning and no other bird will make a sound until the blackbird sings. ❤ Thank you for this video and I will remember to put out apples for my birds. 😁 ❤
Blackbirds are also among my favourites. We see (and hear) them a lot in Sweden. If you are near a bird and you start to whistle a simple tune the can start to imitate and interact with you. Thanks for sharing Liam and have a good Monday! // Bertil.
Our resident blackbird, the latest of many generations living in a yew tree near our 17th century house regularly has a song conversation with me. I starts with his tune "We're off to see the wizard ". I copy this and then he repeats adding beautiful trills and melodies ,to my delight !
The first tune of the last movement of Beethoven's Violin Concerto is a good blackbird kind of tune. In fact I wonder if Beethoven borrowed it from a blackbird.
@@stephenfennell the beginning of the 5th symphony by Beethoven was sung by a blackbird living in my neighbourhood😂 If you are skilled in the secret arts of ornithomancy make yourself ready for a journey into magic and wonders🙂
I have two pairs in my garden. The one male bird has been a resident for the past 3 years. We feed them all year round. He is quite tame, not afraid if me. A constant companion when I dig the garden.
Beautiful song first thing in the morning and always last one I hear at dusk.. I love Blackbirds. I had one female who used to wait on the fence at my garden door and flew to the front when I arrived home in my car from worm work each day ❤️
Glad to see other people mention the looking through the windows aspect. Mine regularly tap on the windows with their beaks whenever they see me moving around inside. Grapes, and apples at this time of year tend to get the best out of my crew and all day blackbird song ( although the 3-4am start to their jam session is not always welcome ).
Oh, I didn't sleep well, Just rescued a female blackbird, 24 hours ago. And she was trilling away for quite a long time. I thought I was dreaming and maybe she was in distress. Now you are saying she is like a rooster, haha.
I live in a native forest here in New Zealand, and I found many years ago that blackbirds love cheese cut into little cubes (about 2mm edges), as do the beautiful doves that also live here. They love it so much that after a lot of patient waiting for them to become used to me, some eat it from my hand. The first to do that was a female, and she did it for many years till she died. A male now likes to wait for me to open the door in the mornings, then comes quickly to my hand to eat as much as he can before an arc of doves come down to take over. He prefers my right hand, but will move to my left if a dove takes my right. So I may have a beautiful white dove eating from one hand and a beautiful blackbird at the other. Some blackbirds are so skilled at following through the air bits of cheese tossed towards them that they will catch them in their beaks. At first they would flee from the tossing movement of my hand, but then they realised that it was not saying 'Shoo!' it was where the food was coming from. That was the first stage of their becoming tamer. Next was coming close to my hand to peck up bits of cheese that fell from from it, then they would pluck up courage and dart in to take bits directly from it. They remain wild, but are tame enough for that. They recognise the sound of my door opening, and my whistle, and as many as twenty will come from all round the nearby part of the forest. At nesting time the ones that come to my hand will go back and forth between me and the nest, ferrying beak-fulls of cheese to their young. Then the chicks come and the ferrying is now only metres.
We have a tame female. She’s been back here now for 4/5 years. We feed her mealworms and she come up to the door and peers through the windows to get our attention. She’s had several chicks and some even squabbled with her trying to take her patch, our garden. We named her Jenny 😉 We thought she may not come back this year but she did, just really late.
Oddly enough I tried feeding live mealworms but the blackbirds went for the little chunks of fat ball. The sparrows just pinched the live mealworms; my plan backfired!
@@JenXOfficialEDM hi there, blackbirds in Europe are not crow family but look similar only much smaller. We do have small crows called jackdaws that live in colonies and are a nuisance when they build nests in your chimney!
I have had blackbirds in the garden for years last year they built a nest 🪺 on our garden ladder completely exposed I felt responsible for them there were five chicks I was praying our jackdaws wouldn’t touch them . They are currently in the garden now 😊
I came from a birding family in Canada and when I moved here to Spain I found I was "bird illiterate". An entire lifetime of bird recognition and knowledge rendered immediately useless in the new environment. My favorite, right away, became the blackbird which I nicknamed "The Business Bird" because he's "all about the business" - so intentional, direct and efficient. Love that Business Bird he makes my day whenever I see him.
That's such a sweet name for blackbirds, and surprisingly apt! I'm from Northern Europe and the blackbird has always been one of my favorite bird buddies around here. I also get the impression that they're very direct. They're always up to something, very energetic, and they seem to glare intensely at me whenever I pass them by haha.
My favourite blackbird was "whitespot" he had a distinctive mark over his left eye, friendly but not too friendly, but an absolute joy to watch, and a hawk got him and there was nothing I could do , we still miss him . 😕
We have these in the garden. They got so used to us that they’d just sit in a branch in a bush or tree and watch. Several of them became brave enough to perch on hands, come into the house to see if there was food and even learnt to tap on the window or door to get attention. They’d get particularly upset if we hadn’t put food out by a certain time. One of them was very confident and worked out where we kept the bird seed and would fly in at any opportunity to help herself. We also had a one legged male blackbird who seemed to do fine despite it, and another male who had some sort of beak deformity, who again seemed to do fine and could eat and drink normally.
As lovely and friendly as Blackbirds are, I don't think it's a good idea to let them into your house. They are quick to learn and could become a pest and possible danger in an easy way to get food in a very short time. Stay safe and keep them happily outside.
They certainly love the soaked sultanas & quartered apples I put out for them during the winter months.And the pyracantha berries & windfall fruit in the Autumn. As for the Spring & Summer-well when they are collecting mud from the pond margins for nest building or having a good old splash & preen I have seen them fish for & take palmate newts from the shallows too!And many a pond snail. I love trying(poorly) to match a blackbirds song by whistling back what they’ve just sung & they always seem to break out into song when anything by Mozart is playing….
Thank you....but you didn't mention anything about their wonderful repertoire of song! Best song bird in the world to me, love them. ❤ We're lucky enough to have a garden full of them.
Thank you for watching this video!
If you would like to support the channel even more, please consider my Patreon which can be found here> www.patreon.com/ashotofwildlife
Things you need to know about BLACKBIRDS! 0940am 25.7.24 males are black with yellow eye liner...females totally brown and drab. which is not how it works with humanity - the women are the ones who are supposed to preen and flounce about in their finery....they seem to do their thing 24/7. i used to think it must be a nightingale making all that racket as i walked home from pub but it was always the blackbird chattering away and grubbing about it the undergrowth.... i wondered if they were just as nasty as the excellent and mighty robin?
Good video just wondered if Three is spelt with a Th or an F
By their chirping smoke alarms ye shall know them.
your sound track has no relevance .. would be better from the original footage for context otherwise informative 🇳🇿
And boy can they sing - beautiful !
You don’t mention how intelligent they are, them and thrushes tap the grass or soil to encourage worms to rise to the surface. I’ve seem magpies mimic them doing this.
Hearing Blackbirds singing in the morning, you know spring is here! I remember during Covid when we had lockdown, i was a key worker and walking to work and back, that's all i could hear, Blackbirds everywhere, it was a joy to hear, it brighten up some dark days/weeks the country was going though!
in my area, we hear mostly robins, but both have such exquisite fluted songs that they brighten the gloomiest day.
The best part of lockdowns seeing nature flourish, the birds and no cars
I totally adore blackbirds. Their singing is one of the most beautiful sounds on earth, especially at dusk when they sit on rooftops and have lengthy and intent conversations with one specific peer some houses further on. Moments like that, especially when there's no human noise to interfere, I feel as if all is well with the world.
Do you adore them at 4am
I so agree, it's such a beautiful song they sing, and always is the perfect ending to warm summer nights. They're my favourite bird too!!
this is why i have an air rifle next to my window
Have you tasted them yet ? 😋
@@pigmentpeddler5811 Sorry I thought this video was about blackbirds, Then I saw your picture and realised it must be about fat, ugly, disgusting pigs instead, my apologies. Top tip - try turning your air rifle around - the world likes a bit of gammon
I found a beaten up, one-eyed, female blackbird chick when i was 12. I raised her and kept her as a pet and she got really tame, hopping on my fingers, sleeping on my belly while i was watching tv and so on. She never flew, though, and i found her dead when she was about 4 years old. I'm really grateful for the time with her.
❤
Awesome , i noticed its the same birds that land in that same place around the same time, birds like black birds starlings, sparrow's etc its the same birds ,they have territories
Lovely wee story thanks for telling me about the one eyed blackbird chick👍
what a blessing for you.
I had a blackbird friend. He was so smart, he used to leave his youngs in my garden while my partner was complaining, "This is not a kinder garden" 😊😊😊. My friend bird one day didn't come back. I still miss him. He used to come to me on the bench where I was scaping from the world and having a cigarette. I was an honor, my little friend.
Im liked that you called him your BLACKBIRD FRIEND, much more equitable than MY BLACKBIRD 👍😉
They certainly leave a place in our hearts when a bird or animal befriends us. You were truly blessed.☺
Black birds, are the first up in THE morning, and last to bed, lovely birds
No, they aren't. First are oystercatchers. 😮
@@andriesscheper2022 Chill out. 99.99% of us don't and never will have oystercatchers singing in our gardens...pretty clear to the vast majority of people I'd imagine that the author of the comment was referring to garden birds.
@@sk-23.round our way I’d say it was a robin who stays up later.
Tuis in NZ 😊
My blackbirds have lived in my garden for the last 20years the male of the original pair is still alive... His off spring are prolific in reproduction... The old male is still trying to hold his own and is so tame he wonders in my kitchen and even the dog takes no notice of him..... I feel very privileged to have been apart of this birds life sultanas are his favourite and he demands them everyday by pecking at the backdoor..... Just to let everyone know ERIC. MY blackbird died this summer 2023 he is now buried in my garden that he loved so much.. He had a very long happy life with us. RIP my sweet little friend 🙏😢🌹
How utterly glorious.👍🏻
They live for 20 years ??
@@shamrockisland yes it's seems so,,,,, he's a bit bedraggled his wings ara a bit droopy and he doesn't fight with the younger ones any more.. I think it's the safety of our walled garden and sultanas as a main diet keep him going... he is a lovely old thing.... and expect I will find him dead one day but that's life....When that time comes I will bury him of. Course in the garden he's guarded and loved for so many years... His off spring live on and are with us everyday 💕🕊️
Lovely experience from your garden
I dont want to doubt you but Wiki ( that fountain of knowledge) says an average blackbird lives 3.4 years and the oldest recorded is about 21 years.
Are you sure its the same bird, lol?
There's one who sings from top a telegraph pole outside my kitchen window every night. The song of life I call it. Absolutely magical.
Love it. Try recording it and slow it down, it’s amazing 🎈
@@thealternativeview2692 same outside my kitchen window such a pleasure very grateful 😁
God blessed us with blackbirds and many more natural delights..
The wonders of God's creation.
I believe these wonders are a gift of the Universe, a Universal LOVE.
Would that be the same god that blessed us with Onchocerca volvulus?
I say us but that particular blessing is reserved mostly, though not entirely, to the residents of Africa.
Perhaps their lives are of less concern to the Lord.
I understand your sentiment on seeing natural wonders, but if you are going to start praising the Lord, remember some of his other works.
The hymn all things bright and beautiful should contain a few darker verses for balance.
He gave us Yersinia pestis, and tuberculosis too.
@@PifflePrattle Disease, nasty plants/animals and death only came into the world after Adam sinned.
Before that time, God had created a perfect world.
Genesis 1:31 "God saw all that he had made, and it was very good"
God never did nothing.
Blackbirds are truly smart. I just love them. And beautiful & caring to their young. Big respect. And to all birds. The world is so much better with them.
(& caring to their young) Natural selection in action.
The most beautiful songs come from these almost plain looking birds.
I adore them ❤
so agree - they are a delight to my worn out soul and their uplifting song brings joy at dawn and twilight
So nice to stumble across a UA-cam channel that isn't about culture wars or partisan politics. This is what life is really all about - blackbirds.
🐦❤
And video gaming
Yes, agree with you.
Agreed. Let's increase the good stuff ❤🐦⬛🪺
Such a spot-on comment!
Blackbirds are my favourite, love their song, have since being a child. Now 72. Beautiful to listen to in the evening.
One thing I love about these birds is it is always the first one awake that you hear, and always the last in the evening to go to bed that you hear. Such beautiful birds
Always the first to start singing before dawn breaks!
I rescued a young blackbird from a cat in 2012, and now 10 years later (and a house move! We moved about a block and she found me again) she's still with us. It's been really neat to see her find a husband and raise their clutches every year- and shriek excitedly when I go outside in case I might have food for them. When I'm gardening, I have a dish that I chuck any undesirable bugs into and she/the husband are quite confidant in running up to me to eat them.
Toxoplasma Gondii (Most prolific parasite known to mankind) & an estimated over 275-million small animals and birds tortured to death every year in the U.K. Cats are disgusting. You'd think any decent human being would stay well clear of them.... Knowing the excrement and urine they will be producing on their neighbour's property.. just proves how horrible we all are.
@@ReggieChump Stay mad bot.
@Sam Hall The oldest recorded age a blackbird reached was 21 years so, uh, yeah they certainly do
@@ReggieChump this is true
Just loverly heartwarming story THANKYOU for sharing x
Blackbird's song always strikes me as one of the most beautiful things on this planet. It is especially touching when it bounces off echoey city walls. Interesting fact: these vocalizations have localized characteristics, just like human languages and dialects.
I had a cock blackbird who mimicked my pet cockatiel who he could hear in our front room. He also had absorbed the sound of the nearby corner shop’s alarm going off.
What a lovely song it is on a summer evening after a hot summer day, just lovely
@@markshrimpton3138 😂
There’s a piece for flute ‘ Le Merle Noir’, inspired by blackbird song.
Yes. A song that finds its way to the heart in an instance. Peace and beauty
They're so cute 🖤 I love everything about them, their wonderful songs, their hasty demeanor, the way they rummage through fallen leaves to find insects, the intensity with which they bathe, projecting water everywhere lol, and simply their perfect shape and cute face. I love all birds but these ones have a special place in my heart 🥰
Thats nice. I am a big fan of blackbirds too. Its great that something which is perhaps a bit less colourful than most birds still has a lot of appreciation!
@farbenfroh7279 thank you ! I spoke with my heart 😊
@soifpls Same here!!! :) last winter a blackbird honoured me with his presence on my balcony day after day. i can't tell you how grateful I am to hear someone else say they find them CUTE!! Bill - as I named him - really was so stinkin fluffy and cute I loved him. Hope he's alright wherever winds have blown him :')
@@azrani2023 the fluffier the better !! There's a whole family of blackbirds in my garden (I've seen a couple of times an adult male surrounded by 4 juveniles) and one of the babies is so ROUND and fluffy 😍 he seems to really enjoy the apples ! I hope Bill is safe and healthy (he probably is ! Blackbirds are clever and extra cautious !) 🤗
@@soifpls your reply brought yet another smile to my face! i can totally picture that fluffball in your garden to be the cutest thing 😍 all the best to you!
The blackbird sings so beautifully ‼️‼️
We have lots of blackbirds and the same family lines for many years, I had a tame one I rescued and she used to go everywhere with me and would happily go in the car and she used to love going in the tractor through the roof and sitting on the dashboard, she bought her young to see me on the ground where I misted them with water and they washed and played; I had her for 7 years until the bad winter got her and I still miss shouting her in the morning for her corn flakes and bowl of water on the kitchen table for her breakfast.
sim shogun, look at bird bath
NoHu
What a special thing to happen to you.
You made it special for her too. Thank you for your caring heart!
How beautiful
I love blackbirds and their calls & vocalisations especially in late evening; I find it really comforting.
Yeah yeah
I agree 100%. A blackbird singing on a quiet evening fills one with a kind of peace and awe and joy.
@@thenoobalmighty8790 🙄
THEY SING SO HEAVENLY, THEY I HOPE IS IN THANKS FOR THEIR DAILY RASINS
I very much like the Blackbird's tuneful singing.
I picked up a baby blackbird a few years ago and it was injured,a vet gave me some powder to sprinkle under its wing.. I tried to get it to fly away but it wouldn't go it lived indoors,then one day after nearly 2 years it decided to go.I felt very privileged to have had the pleasure it brought me.😊
Love these. Very confident and trusting.
Their birdsong is out of this world. A spiritual experience for me❤.
I once had the chance to see a nesting pair from my window during the holidays. I saw the chicks from being blue eggs to the last one leaving the nest. Since than, they have a special place in my heart.
Wonderful little singers, when I used to work nights, we had a blackbird who would sing constantly outside the factory. Great to listen to when we went outside for our breaks.
My favourite bird, purely because how curious they are. They don’t seem to be scared of humans that much, and seem to watch us a lot.
Beautiful song too.
The best birds in the garden. Can’t live without them.
I agree. I adore my blackbird and his family.
We have a resident pair, been with us for 10 years, absolutely love them to bits. The male has always had a damaged wing, we call him Wonky.
I love the Blackbird.
The black bird was introduced into Australia 150 or more years ago, that the little things are cheerful glad to hear their song in the warmer months
Sping mornings and of the day wouldnt be the same without black birds ❤
We live in Germany and I love the blackbirds. They’re called “Amsel” in German. We always have a pair or two nesting in our garden in the hedges. One year we had a paIr right next to the front door. They got used to our comings and goings and 3 lovely plump fledgelings made it to adulthood. Right now, we have a pair nesting right next to our terrace. And another pair further away in the garden. I often see one of the males bathing in our pond. Most entertaining they are.
Yes and they are called "Merel" in Dutch
@@UmVtCg true
In Slovakia they're called "drozdy"
@@UmVtCg In Italian it's "Merli"
Mirlo, in Spanish.
nothing makes me smile more in the evening than blackbirds perched high singing to each other pure joy
My favourite British garden bird. Their song is truly beautiful ❤
We have blackbirds that work through a repertoire of what sound like mobile phone ring tones. These include sirens, alarms, old style phone trills and other mobile phone sounds.
Thank you for a lovely film … ❤ made me smile… in terrible need of that today
Love to all from me in Denmark 🇩🇰
I will never tire hearing blackbirds sing. Beautiful ❤️
Wow! I have Blackbirds that live locally. Every Spring the male sings to me, and I sing back lol. I never thought that it would be the same one in successive years.
We did rescue an adult male with a damaged wing. He can’t fly. We knew fish and game department would euthanize him, so he happily lives with us. He seems content and very glad to see us in the morning. Thanks for an informative video.
Hi I've just rescued a female black bird that was attack by a cat, left wing looks bad and it's left leg also. Any tips and advise on caring for it?
@@theeroom sorry to hear about the injury. If she can stand on the leg, you might support wrap it. Having 2 injuries is a tough challenge to overcome. We treated Rusty's wing wound with Vetricin and it healed, but couldn't re-set his wing. We had him for about a year Sadly, about 10 days ago he died. It was worth it to give him a chance. He became a happy friend. Who knows how old he was.
@@bitbybitfarmseast3085 the same black bird in my garden has been there since i moved in 6yrs ago , it has a distinct ''wuppididy doo '' sounding call song & adds a touch of car alarm / ring tone to his calls , so i know its the same bird
I've have one in my garden every day & very confident as won't fly away when I move around.
Look at bird bath
🐓🐘
My favourite bird ! About 11 years ago, I met my first BB, a male, in one of my shrubs. I did some potting close by when I heard him softly singing. I tried to mimic his song, and he always replied. We became close, and often sing for hours in a duet. I noticed that BBs learn new songs by taking on sounds not only from other BBs, but also from the environment. My BB took on some melodies from me, and he also imitated car alarms! Every BB has its specific songs. I could easily tell, if “my” BB was close by. He LOVED mealworms soaked in water. I also offered him several water trays in various sizes. The large ones he used for bathing. Sadly, after a few years, he did not come back into my garden anymore. I fear one of the many cats killed him, as he was more than 8 years old by then and much slower moving (needless to say, I cannot stand cat owners who let their cats outside to roam around in the neighbourhood). I miss him terribly.
This is my favorite bird and whenever or whereever I hear their song I feel right at home :)
Our tame Blackbird is 8 years old. We feed him currants & sultanas all year round and he behaves like a pet. He is larger than the average Blackbird. During the breeding season the currants & sultanas are marinated in water, to swell them up for the chicks, as he is constantly at the kitchen window or next to me, in the garden, asking for food.
During the moulting season he hangs out in the garden and we feed him, whenever he asks.
He likes my company and will hang out with me, settling down inches away,, burbling quietly to me, if I'm in the garden. He likes to be talked to.
Andy Reid, look at bird bath
I throw out grapes for my couple of blackbird families - their preference is black grapes.
Blackbirds are my favourite. They come down to my window and ask for apples.
@@malaika2940 I will try black grapes. Mine is t interested in green grapes.
really lovely.
I have just spent the week with some friends of mine in Rayleigh, Essex. They have a black female cat which has started spending more time in their garden where a pair of blackbirds have nested in a bush. I was worried about the situation but to my astonishment, during one afternoon in the garden, the cock bird showed incredible bravery and literally chased the terrified cat back indoors. I love blackbirds anyway but I have even more admiration for them after this incident.
Great! I was awakened at 4am to the sound of a frantic male blackbird. A cat was sinisterly prowling up the tree to the mother in the nest.
I once watched my cat eat a whole blackbird in one go, minus the head 😕 all those feathers 🤢 and toward the end i could see its foot sticking out of his mouth 😂
@@thenoobalmighty8790 😢 Mine killed a blckbird once too. Didn't eat it though. Why couldn't he have nicked one of those agressive magpies, or annoying doves ?
@@BrightSeaStar magpies and doves are nice. He needs to go after the stupid pigeons and blasted sea gulls
@@thenoobalmighty8790 No pigeons or seagulls around here !
We had a pair of Blackbirds that had a failed nest and the need to feed young was so strong that they fed the young Robins that were also nesting in our garden , we had very big Robins.
Thanks Maggie .. yes he was well loved ....his offspring all have his tenacity... demanding sultanas every day ......🥰
I’m up at 4am everyday and take great pleasure in sitting outside and listen to the blackbird on his usual perch signing his heart out.❤
One of my favourite birds.Their song and love of grapes which i feed them in abundance.
Blackvirds are my favourite birds. Their song is sooo beautiful and I love the cute orange beak and eyering.
In winter I was so happy hearing the blackbird everyday after sunset, it made the season way less depressing.
A beautiful bird with a song that relaxes the soul. I have one that comes up to my window & looks in to see if I am in my chair to give him food, sometimes when I don't see him, he will knock on the window & run to his position under the window for food. A very nervous bird though, but beautiful.
They are great songsters. At dusk, I love listening to them talking to each other in the neighbourhood.
Blackbirds and Robins are my favourite birds .
I made friends with a blackbird around 2005 by feeding him raisins. He came back multiple times a day for months. My Mum named him Fred. He was a lovely character. He even used to land on the window cill behind me whilst I was eating my dinner at the table. When he landed behind me, I heard a light sound, and my family would say that Fred was knocking on the window for his dinner 😄
i had a female blackbird last year, that no matter what time in the morning i got up, within seconds she would be on the kitchen door handle waiting for me to let her in, i have footage on my youtube, also slow motion birds flying out of my kitchen straight at me
@@johnbird789 Great video. That's proof right there of just how tame and brave they can be if they are befriended 🙂👍
My mom has tamed several blackbirds using raisins. They really love them. She'd even had one that would tick on the window like your Fred.
@@Marco_Onyxheart That's awesome
Writing from North Island NZ. I shared my garden with female blackbird for over 10 years. Fiercely protective about her "patch" and chased off her babies once they could look after themselves. One day she allowed her daughter to stay with her for a couple of days and then she flew off down into the wooded bushland and I never saw her again. Her daughter took over her patch and now she has gone and the garden is shared with her daughter (and male partner).
We have a couple in our cabbage tree (Invercargill) - he's ripping up moss at the moment (presumably to get bugs) - now that I know they switch diets, I'll start putting wild bird seed out
@@angeladawn805 They don't eat the wild bird food I put out but love the sultanas from a separate dish. They along with waxeyes and other birds are always at a small dish of fresh mixed berry jam and water. Fluids are also important especially during summer.
I have a dish of water on my deck for my aged cat that she shares with a family of blackbirds here in Auckland NZ.
Two pairs of blackbirds in my garden, Wellington, NZ, doing a very good job picking the moss from my garden. Love watching them.
I befriended a blackbird at work through feeding it scraps of my breakfast and topping up a bowl with fresh water every morning. Seeds, berries, fruit, nuts, oats, bits of bread etc. It got to the point where he'd come flying down a minute or two after he heard the door closing as I came out of the workshop and would land right beside me on the bench. I was even able to hand-feed him a couple of times. This happened every morning, Monday to Friday, for almost a year until I changed jobs. Still sometimes think of the little fella!
The return of "whistling jack" , thats what i call them, lifts me up from the winter gloom no end,
Lovely birds, they are my favorite ❤
Thank you for the information about the Blackbird! It's my favorite of all birds!
Had an injured one, stay with me for a couple of weeks. He seemed a little reluctant to
leave, and would happily take worms etc from my hand. When he did eventually fly off, i've
never been as pleased to see him recovered, and off to get on with his life again.
How lovely you are ❤
I adore the Black bird, I had one as a garden pet named ‘Tommy’ who would visit me every day for 5 years, Tommy used to fly down and sit beside me most days when I fed him. He knew his name, then one day he never came back. I miss him dearly ❤️. New Zealand.
😥
Marlena , I truly believe that those who touch our hearts, be it bird, animals or human we shall meet them again and they will know us, love is eternal xx
@@LittleBird777 Yes Georgina I couldn’t agree with you more. We are the caretakers for our animals be it domestic or wild they bring their special energies to the planet and humanity. ❤️🌟❤️
they so so beautiful birds, i love them. they sing very beautiful, i always like to listen to them.
Loved your video on Blackbirds my favourite bird in England . I could listen to their song every day and miss them dreadfully .
I love listening to blackbirds singing in the garden, so relaxing. They put so much effort into their singing
My favorite bird i am grateful for such beautiful birds ❤
Lovely to see the comments below of the joy which blackbirds have brought so many people. I have always found the males to be more tame than the females, and just love the variety of song and melody during the long summer evenings. I particularly love how they know how to attract our attention and when they bring their offspring along and feed them in front of us.
I have a female that has landed on my shoulder but the male never gets closer than 3 metres. The female will stand at the bottom of my feet. ❤
In 1800 these birds were shy and staid away from human beings. Now they are forced to settle among us...
Even in my time Eurasian Jay has changed from extremely shy to comfortable with human beings.
@@OmmerSysselThat is very interesting., Ommer. I have often thought similar things about bird behaviour changing over time. I'm inclined to think sparrows are bold and cheerful when there are lots of them together, but when their numbers decline (as they have around here due to nearly the whole street ripping up their gardens and concreting them over for their cars), they seem nervous and inclined to hide.
I have always loved the blackbird and its beautiful song, even i have learnt some new facts Thanks
Also, Blackbirds recognise habits quite easily, like if you feed them at specific times. I have 3 pairs that visit my garden at different times of day, & the females will actually call for me to scatter the mealworms if I'm late. They are very friendly & trusting birds, & I feel honoured they have chose my garden to frequent.
A couple of springs ago one of the blackbirds in our back garden would sing a tune which started with a catchy ‘ jingle ‘ of separate notes or chirps - followed by a lot of extremely quick ones. After hearing this same tune repeated for a week or so I would mimic the first catchy bit which to my surprise was returned immediately ! This carried on throughout the summer when going into the garden. The following year I listened out for the familiar tune but they didn’t appear to re use that sequence of notes - so I was patient for a few weeks but it wasn’t used - so I whistled it at them. A while later my tune was copied by the blackbirds - and they haven’t stopped using it ……I love them . One has an unusual white patch of feather colour on her / his head 👍 many thanks for your work from near the western coast of new forest
Also had one, white n black, a piebald, I believe, back in early 2000's, who'd knock for Ritz cheese filled crackers.
We have a male with a white spot on his head this year 2023
🥰🥰🥰
@@suzyqualcast6269tbh I would too!
Theres one of these birds I keep seeing in my garden and about the town. It has a broken leg, I found it amazing how it was able to keep going on one leg. It sits on fences and lets me walk up pretty close for a look, just sits and looks back at me. I've now noticed that it has a missing tail, it's flying about the place like a delta wing plane. Poor thing has had a tough time, but is still going.
They're tough birds. I used to do wildlife rescue work and blackbirds are fine with just one leg. The tail should grow back in time too.
@@AShotOfWildlife Good to hear that !
Thanks for the inspiring details about the Blackbird.
You didn’t mention their magnificent singing, but thanks for the other information. So interesting
I get many varieties of colourful birds in my garden but it would be hopelessly diminished without our Blackbirds. They are a bit special.
copferthat, look at bird bath
True. They are one tough bird as well. And they are everywere, and plenty of them.
Often the first bird song heard when it's starting to get light,and one of my favourites.
@@rjjcms1 Yes, only a song thrush can beat the song of the Blackbird and they have become alarmingly rare where I am.
They seem to live for a substantial time here in NZ. I have seen one with a distinctive single white wing feather over a period of 8 years.
Ive had a pet blackbird called Turdis in NZ, he proudly brought his baby thrush to see me in the garage when he was teaching her to fly. He was always with her until she went off presumably to find a suitable male & marry. They are amazingly clever birds but he was real special to us as our first real interactive wild bird.
Oh my gosh! I just rescued one here, in Waimakiriri, South Island, NZ. This is going to freak my family out...Haha.
They are problem in my vege garden. Pulling out seedlings, burying small plants when digging deep, nipping corn as it pops out of soil. We have to use netting to keep them away. They are good singers but not as good as the garden thrush I reckon
They develop white feathers with age just as we do.
I love that they keep my veggie patches free of slugs while not touching any of the veggies themselves! They do make a “mess” sometimes but nothing that can’t be quickly tidied up and I’m so grateful! I also love how loud they sing at sunset!
My grandmother used to tell me they're our dead relatives visiting us 😁 , I'm 61 , even now I say hi dad when I see one up close
I've moved over to northeastern Scotland three years ago from upstate New York. It seemed like everything including cards was all about the Robin. The Robin is cute and adorable but it doesn't hold a candle to my black birds. They are absolutely my favourite bird over in this country. They have such a beautiful song. I sit in my shed with the door open and put some food down on the ground for them and they are there within minutes and they are fearless both the male and the female, as l am a mere 5ft away from them. They look right at me and are not afraid. I think that they're the highest on the pecking order because that is the first bird that I hear in the morning and no other bird will make a sound until the blackbird sings. ❤
Thank you for this video and I will remember to put out apples for my birds. 😁 ❤
😯May be put food higher incase cat near🤷🏽♀️ we used greased scaffold pole 👍🏽2protect ours against predators 😉ps welcome 2UK
Blackbirds are also among my favourites. We see (and hear) them a lot in Sweden. If you are near a bird and you start to whistle a simple tune the can start to imitate and interact with you.
Thanks for sharing Liam and have a good Monday! // Bertil.
Bertil Lundin, look at bird bath
Our resident blackbird, the latest of many generations living in a yew tree near our 17th century house regularly has a song conversation with me. I starts with his tune "We're off to see the wizard ". I copy this and then he repeats adding beautiful trills and melodies ,to my delight !
The first tune of the last movement of Beethoven's Violin Concerto is a good blackbird kind of tune. In fact I wonder if Beethoven borrowed it from a blackbird.
@@stephenfennell
the beginning of the 5th symphony by Beethoven was sung by a blackbird living in my neighbourhood😂 If you are skilled in the secret arts of ornithomancy make yourself ready for a journey into magic and wonders🙂
I appreciate how they come each season & clear the patio of moss.
Thanks 🙏
I have two pairs in my garden. The one male bird has been a resident for the past 3 years. We feed them all year round. He is quite tame, not afraid if me. A constant companion when I dig the garden.
That’s lovely. I guess he has learned to trust you and the more they trust you the friendlier they become.
Look at bird bath
🌴🐝
Can I give them dried mealworms?
Beautiful song first thing in the morning and always last one I hear at dusk.. I love Blackbirds. I had one female who used to wait on the fence at my garden door and flew to the front when I arrived home in my car from worm work each day ❤️
A Blackbird in my garden has incorporated the sound of a ringing mobile phone into his song, every time I hear him it makes me smile. 🙂
Glad to see other people mention the looking through the windows aspect. Mine regularly tap on the windows with their beaks whenever they see me moving around inside. Grapes, and apples at this time of year tend to get the best out of my crew and all day blackbird song ( although the 3-4am start to their jam session is not always welcome ).
Oh, I didn't sleep well, Just rescued a female blackbird, 24 hours ago. And she was trilling away for quite a long time. I thought I was dreaming and maybe she was in distress.
Now you are saying she is like a rooster, haha.
I live in a native forest here in New Zealand, and I found many years ago that blackbirds love cheese cut into little cubes (about 2mm edges), as do the beautiful doves that also live here. They love it so much that after a lot of patient waiting for them to become used to me, some eat it from my hand. The first to do that was a female, and she did it for many years till she died. A male now likes to wait for me to open the door in the mornings, then comes quickly to my hand to eat as much as he can before an arc of doves come down to take over. He prefers my right hand, but will move to my left if a dove takes my right. So I may have a beautiful white dove eating from one hand and a beautiful blackbird at the other. Some blackbirds are so skilled at following through the air bits of cheese tossed towards them that they will catch them in their beaks. At first they would flee from the tossing movement of my hand, but then they realised that it was not saying 'Shoo!' it was where the food was coming from. That was the first stage of their becoming tamer. Next was coming close to my hand to peck up bits of cheese that fell from from it, then they would pluck up courage and dart in to take bits directly from it. They remain wild, but are tame enough for that. They recognise the sound of my door opening, and my whistle, and as many as twenty will come from all round the nearby part of the forest. At nesting time the ones that come to my hand will go back and forth between me and the nest, ferrying beak-fulls of cheese to their young. Then the chicks come and the ferrying is now only metres.
'Lovely!.
How wonderful❤
Just glorious when they learn they can trust you and come so close!
We have a tame female. She’s been back here now for 4/5 years. We feed her mealworms and she come up to the door and peers through the windows to get our attention. She’s had several chicks and some even squabbled with her trying to take her patch, our garden. We named her Jenny 😉
We thought she may not come back this year but she did, just really late.
Oddly enough I tried feeding live mealworms but the blackbirds went for the little chunks of fat ball. The sparrows just pinched the live mealworms; my plan backfired!
@@JenXOfficialEDM hi there, blackbirds in Europe are not crow family but look similar only much smaller. We do have small crows called jackdaws that live in colonies and are a nuisance when they build nests in your chimney!
My favourite bird song of all time 🙂 Thanks for the video!
I have had blackbirds in the garden for years last year they built a nest 🪺 on our garden ladder completely exposed I felt responsible for them there were five chicks I was praying our jackdaws wouldn’t touch them . They are currently in the garden now 😊
Got a pair nesting in front garden and a pair in the back garden. Very Busy parents coming and going to and from the nests with beaks full of food. 😊
@@russellgerrard3944 bless them I love watching birds 😊
'Cool!'
I came from a birding family in Canada and when I moved here to Spain I found I was "bird illiterate". An entire lifetime of bird recognition and knowledge rendered immediately useless in the new environment. My favorite, right away, became the blackbird which I nicknamed "The Business Bird" because he's "all about the business" - so intentional, direct and efficient. Love that Business Bird he makes my day whenever I see him.
A birding family??
@@thenoobalmighty8790 What? You never heard the term "birding"? You know - people who like to watch birds?
@@clmclachlan yeah, its called birdwatching you NOOB HAHAHAHA 😂
That's such a sweet name for blackbirds, and surprisingly apt! I'm from Northern Europe and the blackbird has always been one of my favorite bird buddies around here. I also get the impression that they're very direct. They're always up to something, very energetic, and they seem to glare intensely at me whenever I pass them by haha.
The blackbirds in my garden love the cat and dog biscuits xx
I love their song, it's the best wake up ringtone imaginable...
My favourite blackbird was "whitespot" he had a distinctive mark over his left eye, friendly but not too friendly, but an absolute joy to watch, and a hawk got him and there was nothing I could do , we still miss him . 😕
We have these in the garden. They got so used to us that they’d just sit in a branch in a bush or tree and watch. Several of them became brave enough to perch on hands, come into the house to see if there was food and even learnt to tap on the window or door to get attention. They’d get particularly upset if we hadn’t put food out by a certain time. One of them was very confident and worked out where we kept the bird seed and would fly in at any opportunity to help herself.
We also had a one legged male blackbird who seemed to do fine despite it, and another male who had some sort of beak deformity, who again seemed to do fine and could eat and drink normally.
As lovely and friendly as Blackbirds are, I don't think it's a good idea to let them into your house. They are quick to learn and could become a pest and possible danger in an easy way to get food in a very short time. Stay safe and keep them happily outside.
I love blackbirds, I have many of them in my garden and I love watching them.
I love these beautiful birds. Aspecialy they're lovely songs 💜
They certainly love the soaked sultanas & quartered apples I put out for them during the winter months.And the pyracantha berries & windfall fruit in the Autumn.
As for the Spring & Summer-well when they are collecting mud from the pond margins for nest building or having a good old splash & preen I have seen them fish for & take palmate newts from the shallows too!And many a pond snail.
I love trying(poorly) to match a blackbirds song by whistling back what they’ve just sung & they always seem to break out into song when anything by Mozart is playing….
We have several Blackbirds that visit our garden during the day. It's always a joy to see them. They do love the chopped apple we throw out for them.
Thank you....but you didn't mention anything about their wonderful repertoire of song! Best song bird in the world to me, love them. ❤ We're lucky enough to have a garden full of them.
The song of the blackbird is one of the most beautiful sounds in the British countryside.