No shit, I saw a bunch of ravens playing soccer in a Maccas carpark once while I was eating lunch. They'd found a little ball in a happy meal box, and were literally kicking it around with each other just for fun. Smart buggers.
I'm not even joking, mate. This is fair dinkum what I saw happening. I never even thought to get out my phone to record it, because I was sitting as still as possible, just watching, knowing I was seeing something incredible no-one would believe. But if I moved, I might disturb them, and they'd bugger off.
@@MajorMalfunction That's brilliant, I love it! I just wish I knew what the final score was. I suppose it was hard to tell because everyone was wearing the same team colours.
I remember one of my first days in Australia I witnessed a raven jump a pigeon, claw it's wings apart and stuff it's injured body under a car tire. Love this country.
@@freeman10000 And the worst birds. Noisy miners are absolute shits. Well, come to think of it, they're the only Aussie bird that I dislike. So yeah, we do have some of the best.
we just love the time stamp the birds are ok too… #2Spirit edit: Spirit shows us signs we will recognize it really depends on the library you develop with them (no 444 is Atlas)
In central Australia ravens live in large family groups. These family groups are so organised that they will only have one mother lay eggs at a time and the family will raise the chicks together.
I believe you. The ravens on my street appear to have a calendar, because there's always an uptick in their neighbourhood activity every Tuesday arvo, when residents are wheeling their rubbish bins out to the kerb for collection the following morning. And yes, you can bet your arse they make a mess of the street. 😖 Don't overflow bins, people!
I see this in my own back yard in Brissy, so many chicks have come by, raised by a bunch of family (clutch). Same with the magpies, and one old girl still comes by every now and then with a chick after over 5 years of first friending her. All others bow to her on her wing cracks as she lands. I swear I run an avian day care here. *.*
The ravens were one of the highlights of visiting Rottnest Island for me. I had my breakfast stolen by a classic misdirection by a combined quokka/raven heist team. Quokka jumped onto the seat next to me and distracted me with cuteness and the raven swooped in and stole my breakfast, much to the amusement of everyone within a 10m radius.
The name "Waa" may have been onomatopoeia, actually. Several well-known bird names were originally used to describe the calls of different species; e.g., kookaburras, currawongs, galahs, gang gangs, and probably others.
I'm Kamilaroi/Gamilaraay and for example kookaburra is gugurrgaagaa. I think it's common for indigenous languages to name birds after the onomatopoeia. Luckily the word for curlew isn't though lol.
Aww yes! Another backyard naturalist video. I used to have a landlord who loves feeding lorikeets and cockatoos and he made me more appreciative of the Australian nature when I was indifferent before. Now with your videos my appreciation is even more 🐦🕊
Speaking of jokes…. Appropriate Aussie dad joke (best said out loud) Have you noticed that even though they frequently snack on highway tenderised delicacies, ravens never get hit by cars? …. It’s because they’re always in pairs… one levering the freshly bitumen baked wildlife off the road, while another is up in a tree or on a power line, and every time a car comes they yell “car car carrrrrr” (go to 13:18 if you don’t get it if you don’t get it) 😊 🦅
You are genuinely my favourite content creator at the moment. I love learning about our native flora and fauna, with chill aussie homour. Somehow makes it so much easier to absorb the information.
My two Australian Ravens are Eddie and Allie...named after E.A. Poe. They know their names, hand signals and certainly the word "food". They fly down from their domain atop an enormous cypress pine just behind my house for their daily feast of chicken necks. Allie sings to me. Eddie does that "wail" to me, so I'm guessing that only the males do that. Never heard Allie make that sound in the six years they've been here.
@@aishaburhaniyya7532 There are two pairs of Currawongs that visit here every month or so. That usually causes an amount of bedlam. I've managed to feed them a few times as well, so they're fairly comfortable with humans, by the looks.
My uncle had a hobby farm in the Adelaide hills. Ravens used to harass his sheep so he would shoot them with his rifle when they were settled. However they figured out the rifle shape pretty quickly so he painted a broom stick black and brought that out but the didn’t fly away because even from 100m away they could tell it was different. Very smart birds.
I observed an interesting behaviour in one raven. It was up on top of my double story house and looked down before saying ‘faarrrrk.’ Naturally I assumed this meant he/she was afraid of heights.
I’ve been feeding a family of crows for a little while now, the parents & their 2 babies. They come everyday, & while they’re still very nervous & fly away at any sudden movement, they’re edging closer to me everyday ❤️ I’ve always loved crows so it’s been a really cool experience! I’ve also got a couple of families of rainbow lorikeets that visit everyday for some honey water - watching the babies babies beaks form over these past couple of months has been fascinating! I think they’re just about to get the boot though so I really hope they keep coming to visit!
Dude I love your content so much. Never have I been more interested in birds!! Also I really loved the inclusion of the Indigenous folklore! Please keep it up!
😁🥰Good day from Lismore, NSW.🌏 We have a family of Crows that comes down to feed in the backyard, along with Kooburras, Magiepies, Lokeets, and Minors, who come down to drink from two bird baths. The best time to catch them is in the morning and evening. I can see them from the bedroom window while typing on the computer.
I've been in Australia for a couple months and I just adore all the birds here, specially ravens! Your videos are so interesting and fun, thank you! Now I can understand better their behavior (and where the odd noises out there are coming from lol)
Love Ravens! They even have Pub trees here where they gather in groups at sunset and caw at each other, like they are catching up over a drink, lol. The most eerie experience with them that I saw was when I was at Uni and around 300 Little Ravens were sitting around on all the trees, building roofs, railings, just cawing and staring down at everyone walking by. People were really nervous. Another time I gave one a few hot chips from lunch, which the bird loved and then flew off, only to bring back about 6 of its family to join in a few minutes later. I didn't have enough chips for that! Cheeky birds!
Corvids are amazing characters. When you get to know a particular individual over a number of years you realize just how cunning and manipulative they can be. I had a pet crow as a teenager and it was a constant source of amazement. It always felt like having a person around. Always watching and calculating ... and stealing shiny things.
I rescued a fledgling Crow this summer, during a heat wave. He's since been released but comes in every morning for some breakfast and to help me feed the chooks
My mum hates the noise these guys make, but i always thought their call makes them sound like they are being endlessly disappointed... I told her this and now she feels sorry for them haha
Had to sub to your patreon asap, I think I was your first subscriber unless it hadn't updated haha. Your videos brighten my day when I see a new upload, keep up the good work! Would absolutely love to see a video on the willie wagtail, they are my favourite birds ❤
Going to a sheep farm, sometimes the sheep have trouble getting up and get stuck on one side. One of the sheep we found missing an eye because of a Maggie or Raven eating it.
i remember lambing seaspn on the farm 60s there was always a cpl with their eyes plucked out,was always told dont have hungover bloodshot eyes if you got pet raptors maggies crows etc n you handle them every day cause you will lose an eye or two,fuk that😂
Can we just appreciate the absolute poetry that is this man's script? "Gothic garbos" is literary genius. But seriously the entire video was full of alliteration and fancy names I love it.
Backyard naturalist has slowly become my new guilty pleasure channel. Watching someone "appreciate" birds the same way I do, with a unique Aussie twang makes my week!
Guilty pleasure? That is what something trashy like MAFS is, whereas the videos on this glorious channel are about as guilt-free as entertainment gets! Witty humour, clever word play, fascinating footage, excellent music and educational too!
they are just such amazing birds. So cheeky and so funny. Those stories cracked me up. Stealing bin liners, unzipping back packs, taking out drones, smashing windows with golf balls... lol. They are so funny.
There are two Ravens who live much of the time in out yard. Three big trees, a few small ones, a bit unkempt, they love it. Also a human or two who feed them from time to time. They trust us enough to rook their young here every year. Great birds. We also have a similar relationship with a small family of Magpies. The two species have a cantankerous relationship, but do mostly tolerate each other.
Mate i don't know what it is but your sense of humour just has me cackling out loud all the way through your videos, thank you so much for another corker!
I absolutely adore your vids. From the silly nicknames, to the information, to even just the editing, your videos are gems, and brighten my day every time you post. Stay safe❤❤❤❤
Always struggled with identifying the different ravens and crows in aus. This is a huge help. Love this and the calls you included. I'm from the Adelaide hills and the sound of the little raven is so familiar. Used to have a breeding pair that lived in our yard for years. The confident one would come sit on the deck chair and pull my hair and clothes until I paid her attention and fresh meat. A good friend.
The main corvid seen in western regional NSW is significantly larger than the ones I've seen when visiting Melbourne, I haven't seen them in inner Sydney. The ones I saw in Melbourne were smaller than a Magpie, the ones I get locally are quite large, like a magpie to one of them looks like a pee wee does to a magpie.
this channel is fantastic... i have never been interested in any of this stuff until i started watching your vids... very engaging!!!! keep up the good work mate..
Every May, all the local ravens (and we're talking hundreds) congregate in a couple of large pine trees near Eltham in Melbourne, Australia, and have a 'meeting.' I call it the Ravenmoot. It's been happening for YEARS and is fascinating to watch. They all discuss and squabble about stuff, sometimes launching into the air in outrage over something, swirling around overhead a few times before resettling and continuing their 'meeting.' It goes for quite a while. An hour or more? Then they start peeling off in small groups of 3 or 4. Discussing territories mayhap? We have schools nearby, which are a source of endless scavenging, and personally have a pair who regard us and our house as their territory. They bring their new babies into our garden every Spring, and I ADORE them. They've even honoured us with baby-sitting duty more than once! 😍 (They steal eggs from our chooks, walking into the chook-house like they own it!) We also have a magpie couple who regard our house as their territory and have for YEARS, so we're very lucky! Sadly, the council chopped down the 2 big pine trees a month ago, so I'm not sure where the next Ravenmoot will be. 😒
Have a pair of ravens that live at the bottom of my garden along with 6-7 magpies that look to me for food which comes in many forms especially leftovers or a frozen block of chicken casserole or stew. Took them less than 30 minutes to totally demolish a 500 ml block yesterday. Both species watch where I am in my home and there have been times when one or two maggies follow me inside. Will be giving them a bowl of chicken drumettes, mushrooms and assorted vegies around dawn when they start calling for room-service. Don't give them ham because of the additives but do share roast beef, pork and chicken loaf. When working in my garden a few get very close and swoop down from their perch to consume what I've revealed, especially when breaking down a compost heap. They are also partial to rice as are the common bronze-wing doves. They are good company as are the other birds and animals that visit including echidna, the common two possums and kangaroos. Think I've a somewhat resident red-bellied black snake, at least two types of skinks, frogs and nocturnal creatures that stay high up in the gum-trees, especially on hot, still summer nights with their reflective eyes giving away their presence.
I grew up on a sheep farm and can confirm that the will kill lambs. During the drought we had a few years when the crows would sit and wait about 1 or 2 meters away for the mother to give birth and then dive in when she was still down. The little shits would know if you had a gun with you to fly away and if you didn't they would just sit there... mockingly.
Thank you for this upload! I'm from Melbourne and when I was recently in Sydney I definitely heard the difference in their calls! You just explained why!!
I remember finishing work at a large supermarket around midnight one night and walking out into an empty shopping centre car park absolutely covered in crows (that I'm now learning were actually ravens). I stopped counting at about 100 or so. On the trolley bays, across the parking lots, on the lamps, in the trees, atop the bins, perched on signs, everywhere. They weren't *doing* anything, just sort of hanging out. "Oh, that's not a portent of anything at all," I thought, walking slowly backwards to my car.
I always love your vids, and what coincidence that i just happened to be wondering about Ravens and crows when up in Brissy my raven call was longer than the raven's i was calling at.
Love reading the comments here, but just quietly this presentation of the channel is so good, I’ve learned so much because it’s quick, entertaining @ in my backyard (some of them 🎉) 🙏🙏🙏🙏
I absolutely adore your vids. From the silly nicknames, to the information, to even just the editing, your videos are gems, and brighten my day every time you post. Stay safe
I had a frienly raven that appeared in a tree in my yart,so I began feeding it. This was when i used to live rurally, i had nine acres, eventually a group of ravens began visiting and they would fly around me and follow me around the property making their little talking noises. They sometimes followed me into town and meet me at work or at the grocery store. A few times they attacked other people nearby. I once wore a disguise to leave the house and they still recognised me and followed my car to a friends house and killed her new kitten. I eventually moved 60km away to be closer to family, but I still miss my mischievously homicidal flock of feathery friends.
At my other house there was a 60-100m tall Norfolk pine that one day hosted 15 or so crows . It was a choir of Adelaide crows cackling in the branches. It was amazing sight to see. Up here at my other home 3 of them call to each other in the trees " you first " " no you" I will" "okay then " kind of thing . Its almost a conversation
Driving from Queensland to Victoria over the holidays these guys were my best friend in the early morning, as I could spot them on the road before I saw the roadkill they were feasting on.
As a Melbournian, the Little Ravens are a very common sight. You see them at the beach, down the landfill or commercial composting site. You also see them near the local brothel too! (Don't ask how i know this😳) They are very intelligent birds who are also very timid. It honestly doesnt take much to spook one and it'll take off. They scavenge something chronic everyday, roadkill is a favourite of theirs I've just subscribed to your channel, narration is funny and great!. Can't wait to see more bird related videos!
For indigenous stories about crows and ravens, I know of one that I think is from the Gubbi Gubbi people on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast. It says that all birds used to be black, until one day a cockatoo (or maybe some other bird) had a pain in its foot. All the other birds came to help it except for the crow. One of them poked the foot of the cockatoo and colours shot out, giving all birds their unique colours and patterns. But because the crows weren’t there, they are still black. And they’re still annoyed by that, so that’s why they steal things. I think I messed up a few of the details but that’s basically how it goes.
A few years ago some drone aircraft were being tested along the Brisbane river. The local ravens took umbrage with the noisey interlopers. These drones had pusher propellers on the rear. On the first day the ravens were making attacks from behind, and pulling out with loud alarm calls. The second day the attackes came from the front. This was reported in several International aircraft magazines.
Some years ago I rode the BMW up mount Buffalo Vic, when I arrived at the top carpark I noticed a few crows, walking around the track to the summit there were hundreds in the trees. It was a spooky time and I soon left the scene to them.
I love the old man drowning noise that Australian ravens make, it’s so stupid - also good choice in music, Carmen - Habanera has stupendous vibes, that aside another wonderful video about our feathered fiends, I’ve always loved sitting somewhere quiet and listening to our natives go about their lives.
Playing night tennis we watched 2x Indian Miner birds buzzing a crow. The crow was ungainly, but turned it's head in the air & snapped the neck of one of his attackers. The dead bird fell onto the tennis court, we tossed it over the fence & the raven took it away.
Awesome! Love your videos. I have a pair of ravens that visit to check out my feeding of cockatoos, lorikeets and bush/brush turkeys in Sydney. It's taken a year or so but they are getting closer and a little more trusting. They have great fun sneaking up to the turkeys and yanking on their tails! They like dried fruit and wait patiently when I scrub out the bird bath and water tub and refill them. They do bring their babies to visit same as the local magpies
I live south of Canberra and we have some Eastern Ravens that coexist with the Magpies here, they just had 2 babies and I've been feeding them. The babies call sounds like a duck whistle lol. Beautiful and extremely clever animals.
Driving around country WA for many years I’ve come to notice crows spaced out at almost even distances. It makes a fun form of measure. “Eg 10 crows from here to town”. Also they’re like an avian telegraph line. I love their sounds.
Came across a raven feasting on a recently deceased pigeon once; head was buried in the chest cavity, then popped out with... some organ an it's beak. Was pretty graphic. Quite cool though
It genuinely brings me so much joy to see high quality, Australian, environmental content at the top of my feed. As a reasonably confident Aussie naturalist, corvids always test me and I can already tell this video is going to help my ID skills. Keep up the amazing work brother 🦘💪🏼 Admittedly a pedantic piece of feedback, but speaking from taxonomic/academic perspective, you should only capitalise the first half of a Latin binomial name e.g. "Corvus coronoides" instead of "Corvus Coronoides", and ideally italicised.
No shit, I saw a bunch of ravens playing soccer in a Maccas carpark once while I was eating lunch. They'd found a little ball in a happy meal box, and were literally kicking it around with each other just for fun. Smart buggers.
if I saw that, I'd be raven about it too!
No shit. I think they were using my car as the goalposts. They kicked it underneath a few times, and one would go under and bring it back into play.
I'm not even joking, mate. This is fair dinkum what I saw happening. I never even thought to get out my phone to record it, because I was sitting as still as possible, just watching, knowing I was seeing something incredible no-one would believe. But if I moved, I might disturb them, and they'd bugger off.
@@MajorMalfunction That's brilliant, I love it! I just wish I knew what the final score was. I suppose it was hard to tell because everyone was wearing the same team colours.
The crows won. :) But eventually a car pulled-up next to me, and they buggered off. Final siren.
I remember one of my first days in Australia I witnessed a raven jump a pigeon, claw it's wings apart and stuff it's injured body under a car tire. Love this country.
Australia has the best birds.
@@freeman10000 And the worst birds. Noisy miners are absolute shits. Well, come to think of it, they're the only Aussie bird that I dislike. So yeah, we do have some of the best.
If you think the crows are brutal, keep an eye out for the butcher birds. They got that name for a reason
we just love the time stamp
the birds are ok too…
#2Spirit
edit: Spirit shows us signs we will recognize
it really depends on the library you develop with them
(no 444 is Atlas)
@@NewFalconerRecords Indian Mynas are an introduced pest species.
In central Australia ravens live in large family groups. These family groups are so organised that they will only have one mother lay eggs at a time and the family will raise the chicks together.
I believe you. The ravens on my street appear to have a calendar, because there's always an uptick in their neighbourhood activity every Tuesday arvo, when residents are wheeling their rubbish bins out to the kerb for collection the following morning.
And yes, you can bet your arse they make a mess of the street. 😖 Don't overflow bins, people!
Wholesome healthy relationships in the bird world.
Why can't we be like that?
I see this in my own back yard in Brissy, so many chicks have come by, raised by a bunch of family (clutch). Same with the magpies, and one old girl still comes by every now and then with a chick after over 5 years of first friending her. All others bow to her on her wing cracks as she lands. I swear I run an avian day care here. *.*
I don't know about that one Joe.
How central? Didn't see a single crow in four years in Indulkana.
The ravens were one of the highlights of visiting Rottnest Island for me. I had my breakfast stolen by a classic misdirection by a combined quokka/raven heist team. Quokka jumped onto the seat next to me and distracted me with cuteness and the raven swooped in and stole my breakfast, much to the amusement of everyone within a 10m radius.
OOh this sounds like a perfect day spent to me hee hee
honestly this is believable
Yup I had my lunch stolen several times when I worked construction. Not take away either! A packed lunch in a cooler 🤣
Sounds like a kids book
The amount of metaphors for ravens and crows here is impressive!
I was going to include asphalt albatross and obsidian osprey haha
@@the-Backyard-Naturalistsave those gems for an upcoming video.
Sooty savant was my favourite
I'm getting a Casual Geographic vibe...
We do love a good nickname in Oz 🤷♀️
The fact that the name for the Raven in the mythology is 'Waa' is just perfect. Like if they named a Dog 'Bark' or a Cat 'Meow'.
The name "Waa" may have been onomatopoeia, actually. Several well-known bird names were originally used to describe the calls of different species; e.g., kookaburras, currawongs, galahs, gang gangs, and probably others.
I'm Kamilaroi/Gamilaraay and for example kookaburra is gugurrgaagaa. I think it's common for indigenous languages to name birds after the onomatopoeia. Luckily the word for curlew isn't though lol.
The Vietnamese word for cat is literally "mèo", so it wouldn't be unprecedented.
Hmmmm the more Aussie version would be “woooo” (blue for redheads 🤷♀️)
In my people's language (Yolgnu), the word for crow is literally "Waak".
Aww yes! Another backyard naturalist video. I used to have a landlord who loves feeding lorikeets and cockatoos and he made me more appreciative of the Australian nature when I was indifferent before. Now with your videos my appreciation is even more 🐦🕊
Australia, where even the animals have accents.
Jokes aside this was very informative
Speaking of jokes…. Appropriate Aussie dad joke (best said out loud) Have you noticed that even though they frequently snack on highway tenderised delicacies, ravens never get hit by cars? …. It’s because they’re always in pairs… one levering the freshly bitumen baked wildlife off the road, while another is up in a tree or on a power line, and every time a car comes they yell “car car carrrrrr” (go to 13:18 if you don’t get it if you don’t get it) 😊 🦅
I'll be "raven" and "crowing" about this video for ages. An absolute treat!
You get an award. 😂
Love our ravens. Bill Bailey said they called with a sarcastic tone. We have one in our tree that barks at the dogs.
You are genuinely my favourite content creator at the moment.
I love learning about our native flora and fauna, with chill aussie homour.
Somehow makes it so much easier to absorb the information.
My two Australian Ravens are Eddie and Allie...named after E.A. Poe.
They know their names, hand signals and certainly the word "food".
They fly down from their domain atop an enormous cypress pine just behind my house for their daily feast of chicken necks.
Allie sings to me. Eddie does that "wail" to me, so I'm guessing that only the males do that.
Never heard Allie make that sound in the six years they've been here.
Had a Currawong named Ikabod
@@aishaburhaniyya7532 There are two pairs of Currawongs that visit here every month or so. That usually causes an amount of bedlam. I've managed to feed them a few times as well, so they're fairly comfortable with humans, by the looks.
I've always described the call of the Australian Raven as "imagine a bird doing a Bob Hawke impression"
Lol, that is gold! Spot on.
Lol, that is the best! So spot on. Rest in peace hawkey.
Melbourne being depicted as city 17 made me burst out in raucous laughter
That's just a real picture I took on Swanston street
You got Adelaide spot on.
It’s so unfair Melbourne is nothing like City 17
City 17 has way better weather
@joshanderson9391 Yeah but Melbourne is most liveable in the world because you don't have police trying to shoot you up everyday
@@joshanderson9391 Can't wait to try some of Dr. Dan's Private Reserve
My uncle had a hobby farm in the Adelaide hills. Ravens used to harass his sheep so he would shoot them with his rifle when they were settled. However they figured out the rifle shape pretty quickly so he painted a broom stick black and brought that out but the didn’t fly away because even from 100m away they could tell it was different. Very smart birds.
I observed an interesting behaviour in one raven. It was up on top of my double story house and looked down before saying ‘faarrrrk.’ Naturally I assumed this meant he/she was afraid of heights.
😂😂
"Farrrrrrk that!"
I’ve been feeding a family of crows for a little while now, the parents & their 2 babies. They come everyday, & while they’re still very nervous & fly away at any sudden movement, they’re edging closer to me everyday ❤️ I’ve always loved crows so it’s been a really cool experience! I’ve also got a couple of families of rainbow lorikeets that visit everyday for some honey water - watching the babies babies beaks form over these past couple of months has been fascinating! I think they’re just about to get the boot though so I really hope they keep coming to visit!
Dude I love your content so much. Never have I been more interested in birds!! Also I really loved the inclusion of the Indigenous folklore! Please keep it up!
😁🥰Good day from Lismore, NSW.🌏 We have a family of Crows that comes down to feed in the backyard, along with Kooburras, Magiepies, Lokeets, and Minors, who come down to drink from two bird baths. The best time to catch them is in the morning and evening. I can see them from the bedroom window while typing on the computer.
So love them. A couple visit me twice a day. Cannot help but feed them as they are so patient & just wait & wait.
I've been in Australia for a couple months and I just adore all the birds here, specially ravens!
Your videos are so interesting and fun, thank you! Now I can understand better their behavior (and where the odd noises out there are coming from lol)
Love Ravens! They even have Pub trees here where they gather in groups at sunset and caw at each other, like they are catching up over a drink, lol. The most eerie experience with them that I saw was when I was at Uni and around 300 Little Ravens were sitting around on all the trees, building roofs, railings, just cawing and staring down at everyone walking by. People were really nervous. Another time I gave one a few hot chips from lunch, which the bird loved and then flew off, only to bring back about 6 of its family to join in a few minutes later. I didn't have enough chips for that! Cheeky birds!
My masterful man, I adore your alliteration in this video
ive always characterized our crow's calls as "someone getting a massage thats just a bit too hard"
Lol, and I thought the bob hawke analogy was good, perhaps it's bob hawk getting a hard massage 😂
Underrated comment
Corvids are amazing characters. When you get to know a particular individual over a number of years you realize just how cunning and manipulative they can be.
I had a pet crow as a teenager and it was a constant source of amazement. It always felt like having a person around. Always watching and calculating ... and stealing shiny things.
Alot in common with humans hey.
@@keef78 Indeed!
I rescued a fledgling Crow this summer, during a heat wave. He's since been released but comes in every morning for some breakfast and to help me feed the chooks
Past week has been spent watching currawongs teaching the kids how to eat figs off my tree....
Currawongs have the best call.
My mum hates the noise these guys make, but i always thought their call makes them sound like they are being endlessly disappointed...
I told her this and now she feels sorry for them haha
Yes, it's that downward inflection.
Their face looks like that too. I've got a "pet" raven and he always looks like he is judging me and is unimpressed. Lol
It's not one of our best you gotta admit but they are awesome birds.
Love these guys …. Such an iconic sound & childhood memories. Had a family nest in our yard &was so much fun watching their antics
Had to sub to your patreon asap, I think I was your first subscriber unless it hadn't updated haha. Your videos brighten my day when I see a new upload, keep up the good work! Would absolutely love to see a video on the willie wagtail, they are my favourite birds ❤
Thank you very much! I'm thinking about shorter vids to cover one off species like willy wagtails or currawongs, which I'll be able to get out faster.
@@the-Backyard-Naturalist would absolutely love to see them :)
Going to a sheep farm, sometimes the sheep have trouble getting up and get stuck on one side. One of the sheep we found missing an eye because of a Maggie or Raven eating it.
Yeah ravens go for the eyes, it's brutal. Guess what happened to that fish...
@@the-Backyard-Naturalist ...it went to a sheep farm?
Blame Sam Kekovich
i remember lambing seaspn on the farm 60s there was always a cpl with their eyes plucked out,was always told dont have hungover bloodshot eyes if you got pet raptors maggies crows etc n you handle them every day cause you will lose an eye or two,fuk that😂
Can we just appreciate the absolute poetry that is this man's script? "Gothic garbos" is literary genius. But seriously the entire video was full of alliteration and fancy names I love it.
I cannot emphasize enough how much I enjoy these videos. They are so well done! Keep up the fantastic work!
Licorice Larks! Love it
Backyard naturalist has slowly become my new guilty pleasure channel. Watching someone "appreciate" birds the same way I do, with a unique Aussie twang makes my week!
Guilty pleasure? That is what something trashy like MAFS is, whereas the videos on this glorious channel are about as guilt-free as entertainment gets!
Witty humour, clever word play, fascinating footage, excellent music and educational too!
@@Beaut_Beau You know what you're right! Nothing guilty about watching this channel for fun, laughs and education!
they are just such amazing birds. So cheeky and so funny. Those stories cracked me up. Stealing bin liners, unzipping back packs, taking out drones, smashing windows with golf balls... lol. They are so funny.
Not funny when you have a chicken pen in the backyard. They are the ultimate egg thieves.
I get so excited when I see you've uploaded. Thank you!
1 Minute in and I already know you've gone hard in the paint for these precious buggers 👍
There are two Ravens who live much of the time in out yard. Three big trees, a few small ones, a bit unkempt, they love it. Also a human or two who feed them from time to time. They trust us enough to rook their young here every year. Great birds. We also have a similar relationship with a small family of Magpies. The two species have a cantankerous relationship, but do mostly tolerate each other.
Love how you actually got a pic of Adelaide for reference. Very educational. 10/10
Was honestly expecting Currawong to be on this list. Was shocked that it wasn't lol. They are Strepera
Mate i don't know what it is but your sense of humour just has me cackling out loud all the way through your videos, thank you so much for another corker!
I absolutely adore your vids. From the silly nicknames, to the information, to even just the editing, your videos are gems, and brighten my day every time you post. Stay safe❤❤❤❤
Thank you!
Another awesome video from the Alliterative Artisan, I mean Backyard Naturalist.
Always struggled with identifying the different ravens and crows in aus. This is a huge help. Love this and the calls you included. I'm from the Adelaide hills and the sound of the little raven is so familiar. Used to have a breeding pair that lived in our yard for years. The confident one would come sit on the deck chair and pull my hair and clothes until I paid her attention and fresh meat. A good friend.
Education though humour - just the best.
The main corvid seen in western regional NSW is significantly larger than the ones I've seen when visiting Melbourne, I haven't seen them in inner Sydney. The ones I saw in Melbourne were smaller than a Magpie, the ones I get locally are quite large, like a magpie to one of them looks like a pee wee does to a magpie.
There's only two places I tend to notice ravens, cemeteries and nowhere places where you think you just might get murdered by a nutter
I wanted to film them in a cemetery but instead there were heaps of currawongs
Intj here!
Hilarious and informative as usual. And good to know which i saw /heard in tassie!
I’m an INTJ and I adore these birds
"I blame Sam Kekovich for radicalising our ravens" definitely my favourite, brand new sentence
this channel is fantastic... i have never been interested in any of this stuff until i started watching your vids... very engaging!!!! keep up the good work mate..
"Shedding our avocado-powered life-support system" is the most Melbourne metaphor for death I've ever heard.
Every May, all the local ravens (and we're talking hundreds) congregate in a couple of large pine trees near Eltham in Melbourne, Australia, and have a 'meeting.' I call it the Ravenmoot. It's been happening for YEARS and is fascinating to watch. They all discuss and squabble about stuff, sometimes launching into the air in outrage over something, swirling around overhead a few times before resettling and continuing their 'meeting.' It goes for quite a while. An hour or more? Then they start peeling off in small groups of 3 or 4. Discussing territories mayhap?
We have schools nearby, which are a source of endless scavenging, and personally have a pair who regard us and our house as their territory. They bring their new babies into our garden every Spring, and I ADORE them. They've even honoured us with baby-sitting duty more than once! 😍 (They steal eggs from our chooks, walking into the chook-house like they own it!) We also have a magpie couple who regard our house as their territory and have for YEARS, so we're very lucky!
Sadly, the council chopped down the 2 big pine trees a month ago, so I'm not sure where the next Ravenmoot will be. 😒
Another Amazing video! You should do one about the brush turkey next.
Have a pair of ravens that live at the bottom of my garden along with 6-7 magpies that look to me for food which comes in many forms especially leftovers or a frozen block of chicken casserole or stew. Took them less than 30 minutes to totally demolish a 500 ml block yesterday. Both species watch where I am in my home and there have been times when one or two maggies follow me inside. Will be giving them a bowl of chicken drumettes, mushrooms and assorted vegies around dawn when they start calling for room-service. Don't give them ham because of the additives but do share roast beef, pork and chicken loaf. When working in my garden a few get very close and swoop down from their perch to consume what I've revealed, especially when breaking down a compost heap. They are also partial to rice as are the common bronze-wing doves. They are good company as are the other birds and animals that visit including echidna, the common two possums and kangaroos. Think I've a somewhat resident red-bellied black snake, at least two types of skinks, frogs and nocturnal creatures that stay high up in the gum-trees, especially on hot, still summer nights with their reflective eyes giving away their presence.
Thanks for making such a fun, watchable, and informative video ❤
Yes! another Backyard Naturalist video, and it's about CORVIDS 🔥
I love these videos! They're a factual delight and a vocabulary lesson in one!
This was a refreshing change of pace from TierZoo and Casual Geographic, as much as I love those two channels!
Great stuff. Informative and entertaining as always. Looking forward to the next one.
Ravens, the sound of an Aussie winter morning
A fantastic mix of info, aussie humor and epic maymays. I salute your hard work sir
Hilarious video mate! I feel you have to be truly Australian to appreciate the brilliance of this video.
I never knew they had different length of calls. I’m going to listen more carefully now. Top video as always.
I grew up on a sheep farm and can confirm that the will kill lambs. During the drought we had a few years when the crows would sit and wait about 1 or 2 meters away for the mother to give birth and then dive in when she was still down. The little shits would know if you had a gun with you to fly away and if you didn't they would just sit there... mockingly.
Thank you for this upload! I'm from Melbourne and when I was recently in Sydney I definitely heard the difference in their calls! You just explained why!!
I remember finishing work at a large supermarket around midnight one night and walking out into an empty shopping centre car park absolutely covered in crows (that I'm now learning were actually ravens). I stopped counting at about 100 or so. On the trolley bays, across the parking lots, on the lamps, in the trees, atop the bins, perched on signs, everywhere. They weren't *doing* anything, just sort of hanging out.
"Oh, that's not a portent of anything at all," I thought, walking slowly backwards to my car.
I always love your vids, and what coincidence that i just happened to be wondering about Ravens and crows when up in Brissy my raven call was longer than the raven's i was calling at.
I've always loved the corvids. And I was born on Ngoogar land in Perth and I'm loving the Ngoogar raven lore as carrier of the souls of the dead.
Love reading the comments here, but just quietly this presentation of the channel is so good, I’ve learned so much because it’s quick, entertaining @ in my backyard (some of them 🎉) 🙏🙏🙏🙏
I absolutely adore your vids. From the silly nicknames, to the information, to even just the editing, your videos are gems, and brighten my day every time you post. Stay safe
I like city 17 so much, I've made it my home. Thank you Melbourne.
My favourite birds! Thanks for making such a good video
Never knew if these birds in Canberra were ravens or crows but you cleared it up for me. Thanks!
I'm glad you're bringing the wonders of the Australian wildlife to the public, keep it up 👍
I had a frienly raven that appeared in a tree in my yart,so I began feeding it. This was when i used to live rurally, i had nine acres, eventually a group of ravens began visiting and they would fly around me and follow me around the property making their little talking noises. They sometimes followed me into town and meet me at work or at the grocery store. A few times they attacked other people nearby. I once wore a disguise to leave the house and they still recognised me and followed my car to a friends house and killed her new kitten. I eventually moved 60km away to be closer to family, but I still miss my mischievously homicidal flock of feathery friends.
Thanks for all your videos
Finally I know what species of corvid I'm hearing!
At my other house there was a 60-100m tall Norfolk pine that one day hosted 15 or so crows . It was a choir of Adelaide crows cackling in the branches. It was amazing sight to see. Up here at my other home 3 of them call to each other in the trees " you first " " no you" I will" "okay then " kind of thing . Its almost a conversation
Driving from Queensland to Victoria over the holidays these guys were my best friend in the early morning, as I could spot them on the road before I saw the roadkill they were feasting on.
As a Melbournian, the Little Ravens are a very common sight. You see them at the beach, down the landfill or commercial composting site. You also see them near the local brothel too! (Don't ask how i know this😳)
They are very intelligent birds who are also very timid. It honestly doesnt take much to spook one and it'll take off. They scavenge something chronic everyday, roadkill is a favourite of theirs
I've just subscribed to your channel, narration is funny and great!. Can't wait to see more bird related videos!
For indigenous stories about crows and ravens, I know of one that I think is from the Gubbi Gubbi people on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast. It says that all birds used to be black, until one day a cockatoo (or maybe some other bird) had a pain in its foot. All the other birds came to help it except for the crow. One of them poked the foot of the cockatoo and colours shot out, giving all birds their unique colours and patterns. But because the crows weren’t there, they are still black. And they’re still annoyed by that, so that’s why they steal things.
I think I messed up a few of the details but that’s basically how it goes.
Your word play is immaculate, my friend
A few years ago some drone aircraft were being tested along the Brisbane river. The local ravens took umbrage with the noisey interlopers. These drones had pusher propellers on the rear. On the first day the ravens were making attacks from behind, and pulling out with loud alarm calls. The second day the attackes came from the front.
This was reported in several International aircraft magazines.
Some years ago I rode the BMW up mount Buffalo Vic, when I arrived at the top carpark I noticed a few crows, walking around the track to the summit there were hundreds in the trees. It was a spooky time and I soon left the scene to them.
Yes to the opening back packs. Go to Whiteman Park in Perth WA and leave your lunch bag in a picnic area.
I love the old man drowning noise that Australian ravens make, it’s so stupid - also good choice in music, Carmen - Habanera has stupendous vibes, that aside another wonderful video about our feathered fiends, I’ve always loved sitting somewhere quiet and listening to our natives go about their lives.
My favourite bird. Love these videos. Intelligently witty.
Playing night tennis we watched 2x Indian Miner birds buzzing a crow. The crow was ungainly, but turned it's head in the air & snapped the neck of one of his attackers. The dead bird fell onto the tennis court, we tossed it over the fence & the raven took it away.
Myna or mynah
An excellent assessment of an underappreciated bird!
Awesome! Love your videos. I have a pair of ravens that visit to check out my feeding of cockatoos, lorikeets and bush/brush turkeys in Sydney. It's taken a year or so but they are getting closer and a little more trusting. They have great fun sneaking up to the turkeys and yanking on their tails! They like dried fruit and wait patiently when I scrub out the bird bath and water tub and refill them. They do bring their babies to visit same as the local magpies
So, the Adelaide Crows should really be called the Ravens if I'm understanding this correctly.
They're from Adelaide, so should we care 🤷🏻♂️?
They should, but it wouldn't roll off the tongue as easily.
@@relwalretep Definitely.
@@relwalretepis that why they fly on their back over Adelaide ?
The West Coast Eagles should be called the Seagulls 😊
Thank you for this video about Australian crows and ravens.
I live south of Canberra and we have some Eastern Ravens that coexist with the Magpies here, they just had 2 babies and I've been feeding them. The babies call sounds like a duck whistle lol. Beautiful and extremely clever animals.
Driving around country WA for many years I’ve come to notice crows spaced out at almost even distances. It makes a fun form of measure. “Eg 10 crows from here to town”. Also they’re like an avian telegraph line. I love their sounds.
I love watching ravens and crows
Came across a raven feasting on a recently deceased pigeon once; head was buried in the chest cavity, then popped out with... some organ an it's beak. Was pretty graphic. Quite cool though
haha the sheer number of alternative names you gave them in this video is worthy of a standing ovation! Bravo
It genuinely brings me so much joy to see high quality, Australian, environmental content at the top of my feed.
As a reasonably confident Aussie naturalist, corvids always test me and I can already tell this video is going to help my ID skills. Keep up the amazing work brother 🦘💪🏼
Admittedly a pedantic piece of feedback, but speaking from taxonomic/academic perspective, you should only capitalise the first half of a Latin binomial name e.g. "Corvus coronoides" instead of "Corvus Coronoides", and ideally italicised.