My friend in San Francisco who lives on top of a hill has her own flock. She puts the food on the top railing of her deck and she gets 30 or so of them to come and eat each day. They are so used to her they are now landing on her arm and eating out of her hand!!! She sends us videos. But I told her to be sure and wash her hands super super well after visiting with her birds!!
it is amazing that a highly endangered species in its original homeland, which still has an uncertain future due to the inability to protect the population from illegal hunting, has such a thriving and growing wild population in a place where it is unlikely to be threatened. We can only hope that some blinded conservationist will not seek to shoot the "non-native species". But as a back-up source for releases to native habitats, it wouldn't be a bad attempt if the growing population in San Francisco were to threaten or expand too much.
Bet they make an awful mess dropping those spent berry husks. They often stop by my roost near the Sanchez Stairs at 19th St. I see them going from the Mission District to the Castro all the time.
They can be messy, you are right about that! I still wish I had a girlfriend for my boy Noel! I named him for his green and red coloring since we got him around December of 2016. I sincerely hope he lives for a good long time. He is a free-thinker and his speech is amazing and his sense of humor is out of this world. I don't know where his original human got him, but I love him to no end! There is one downside to the whole deal, he likes to tell us humans "hey you, be quiet".
This was shot with a Canon Vixia HF G30. The blog that I linked to in the description seems to have been taken down. Which is a pity, because it contained very good details about the birds. I have now edited the description to remove the dead link and replace it with another link to a KQED article about them here: www.kqed.org/news/11185731/where-did-the-wild-parrots-of-san-francisco-come-from It has this to say about them: "The wild parrots in and around San Francisco are called cherry-headed conures. At one point, a mitred conure joined the flock and bred with the cherry heads. Now the flock is dotted with hybrids. There are a couple ways to differentiate the breeds. Cherry heads have slightly smaller bodies and a red helmet pattern on their heads, whereas mitred conures have a more blotchy pattern of red and feet that are a slightly darker hue."
Does anyone breed these? I have a male, I'm quite sure by personality, I would love to have a female! My cherry-head sounds like a grumpy little old man!
My friend in San Francisco who lives on top of a hill has her own flock. She puts the food on the top railing of her deck and she gets 30 or so of them to come and eat each day. They are so used to her they are now landing on her arm and eating out of her hand!!! She sends us videos. But I told her to be sure and wash her hands super super well after visiting with her birds!!
I have a parrot like this. She loves to listen to her friends talk
Yes saw a green cloud of parrots flying in the sunset district years ago plus at Embarcadro past the flee market area in the trees hundreds of them
Their home is along a steep path with stairs winding between homes, I have seen them many times. It's really beautiful
We have a flock of about 30 of them that fly through Brisbane every few days. Maybe they live here and commute to the City or vice versa. LOL
Thank you for sharing, beautiful parrots
Amazing footage! Love nature! Good Luck always!
November Sunday 11/19/23 On
2:33 pm.☀️
Saw them today flying in Sunnyvale, very distinctive squawking
EXCELLENT! ..Thanks! I love them!!! : )
Beautiful video ~ Thank you!
I love their natural language
Wow that Juniper looks laden. Very beautiful video!!! The bird at 03:53 could be Scrapper?
❤❤❤❤❤❤
it is amazing that a highly endangered species in its original homeland, which still has an uncertain future due to the inability to protect the population from illegal hunting, has such a thriving and growing wild population in a place where it is unlikely to be threatened. We can only hope that some blinded conservationist will not seek to shoot the "non-native species". But as a back-up source for releases to native habitats, it wouldn't be a bad attempt if the growing population in San Francisco were to threaten or expand too much.
Esta especie de perico es la aratinga de Guayaquil yo tengo uno y es flojo para hablar le gustan más las semillas de girasol
They sound like wet rubber shoes squeaking!
Bet they make an awful mess dropping those spent berry husks. They often stop by my roost near the Sanchez Stairs at 19th St. I see them going from the Mission District to the Castro all the time.
They can be messy, you are right about that! I still wish I had a girlfriend for my boy Noel! I named him for his green and red coloring since we got him around December of 2016. I sincerely hope he lives for a good long time. He is a free-thinker and his speech is amazing and his sense of humor is out of this world. I don't know where his original human got him, but I love him to no end! There is one downside to the whole deal, he likes to tell us humans "hey you, be quiet".
Hell there I want to ask you what type of camera you are using.
Is the parrot 🦜 only one kind in San Francisco or there’s Different species
This was shot with a Canon Vixia HF G30.
The blog that I linked to in the description seems to have been taken down. Which is a pity, because it contained very good details about the birds. I have now edited the description to remove the dead link and replace it with another link to a KQED article about them here: www.kqed.org/news/11185731/where-did-the-wild-parrots-of-san-francisco-come-from
It has this to say about them: "The wild parrots in and around San Francisco are called cherry-headed conures. At one point, a mitred conure joined the flock and bred with the cherry heads. Now the flock is dotted with hybrids. There are a couple ways to differentiate the breeds. Cherry heads have slightly smaller bodies and a red helmet pattern on their heads, whereas mitred conures have a more blotchy pattern of red and feet that are a slightly darker hue."
Did you use any special lens
No, just the built-in lens. You can get within just a few feet of the birds without making them fly away.
Thanks for your time.
what are they eating?
Juniper berries
Does anyone breed these? I have a male, I'm quite sure by personality, I would love to have a female! My cherry-head sounds like a grumpy little old man!
Rhoda they are a wild flock, social birds seek out food together, mark bittner goggle and you get whole background.
Give me one parrot
They are Mitred Conures not cherry headed conures
#RestoreTheSnyderVerse
Cherry Head Conures
The Exotic Birds Species. 🦜🐦🕊️🌳
I Saw It.