Personally, I like to talk to them. I have no idea whether this helps or not. But I treat each one with dignity, greet them when I see them, explain what I'm doing as I'm getting out a treat, ask them how their days have been, that sort of thing.
Top-level
Personally, I like to talk to them. I have no idea whether this helps or not. But I treat each one with dignity, greet them when I see them, explain what I'm doing as I'm getting out a treat, ask them how their days have been, that sort of thing. 242 comments
We have a lot of crows around here. If I had more energy, I'd strike up a relationship with them. I'd hate to commit to something I couldn't be sure of following through on, though. @ct_bergstrom do they ever bring you presents? I remember reading a news story once about crows that befriended a girl and bright her shiny things. @ct_bergstrom Descendants of the dinosaur, recognize faces of humans, are monogamous for life and live more than 15 years. But they are around me with a little too much than I care for. @ct_bergstrom I love this thread & your suggestions. Once I added shelled peanuts to my bird feeders the crows began showing up. I love them! @ct_bergstrom I talk to the birds, too. I've also learned that they fly away faster if I'm looking directly at them, so I have to talk to them while facing away from them. My neighbors probably think I'm insane. :) @ct_bergstrom we have both crows, red tailed and coopers hawks in our neighborhood. The crows frequently collaborate and chase the hawks. Since itโs not nesting season, sort of curious why theyโre doing it as I donโt think the hawks are a threat to the crows? Everything if found via google just says, yeah they do this. For the crows that live near my house, I have a call as well. It's simple. I go outside and shout "Hello, crows!" I'd do that every time before feeding them, especially if they were nearby to see me feeding. After a few months, they started doing something new. When I called them, even if they were blocks away, they started talking back with loud food calls. Now I can go outside, call once, and then listen to them calling back to me as they fly in from all around the neighborhood. Photo: A frequent visitor who goes around the house until she can see me through the window, and then endeavors to get my attention. The crows at work almost always spot me before I spot them. I think they recognize my gait because they can find me in a new jacket with the hood up against the Seattle rain. They have a particular flight pattern, a low swoop braking right in of me, to get my attention. Sometimes their wingtips brush my arm as they come by. This took a while; at first I would feed them any time I saw them, even up high on a light pole. Now I wait for them to swoop me. My avatar here is one of those work crows. Sometimes after an unpleasant work meeting or something they find me as, tired and grumpy, I'm leaving my building. They never fail to make me laugh, and to turn around my mood. I've never received trinkets from crows, but they've still given me more than I've given them. @ct_bergstrom I once received a dried stalk of grass that had gone to seed as a gift. The crow insisted that I take it. @Lee_in_Iowa @ct_bergstrom thatโs what I figured since I leave mealworms for them. @ct_bergstrom I absolutely love and am fascinated by crows. We have a very active murder around our property and they are totally intriguing. Then there are fledglings! If crows trust you, they will introduce you to their young ones. Nothing is better. Nothing. Crows are also loyal and brave. Please do not piss them off because they hold grudges โ and share these grudges with their brethren. Victims, clockwise from top left: Bald eagle, red-tailed hawk, osprey, common raven. Which brings me to a warning. Tempting as it can be, under no circumstances should you use the instructions Iโve provided here to assemble your own personal arm of crows to carry out acts of unspeakable evilโor even to wage justified campaigns of retribution against your enemies. Crows are wise birds, and they will catch own quickly. Once your crow army realizes that your seeming friendship is merely an instrumental ploy to harness their power to your own ends, may God help youโfor I cannot. So that's pretty much it. It's relatively easy to befriend crows, and it's endlessly rewarding. I hope that a few of you are able to make crow friends of your own, and I look forward to hearing about your adventures with them. @ct_bergstrom Carl, thank you so much for this thread. I have an old and very dear friend who is a HUGE fan of crows. She even has one tattooed on her calf. She's currently in the hospital fighting for her life. And I sit here 3000 miles away feeling helpless. Your thread lifted my spirits during a rough holiday season. Thank you! โค๏ธ @lakelady @ct_bergstrom may the raven and crow spirits attend and strengthen her @ct_bergstrom Thank you for such an informative thread. I've always enjoyed our neighborhood crows. A group of them regularly spend time in our back garden (commonly 5-6). Never realized we could try to befriend them. Thanks for the advice. @ct_bergstrom I share your regard for and love of crows. Have had some very special interactions with them which have taught me much about their 'crowmanity'. Would add one more thing. They exist with other birds. Have often noted how when garden birds are threatened by arrival of a predator, one crow calls the others and in comes the support. They are an important part of a bird community @ct_bergstrom I have two different groups who come by for peanuts. There were a few initial squabbles but now they seem to have a time sharing arrangement.Original crow is still my fave, so smart and shiny! @ct_bergstrom such an informative thread thank you. Shared with wife and daughter. Weโve taken up birding the last year or so. Going to have to try and make friends with our neighborhood crows. In the spring we hand 6-8 crows regularly they disappeared for a while and just a couple around now. These pictures taken when they were in a tree in our backyard. @ct_bergstrom Itโs gonna be one of my New Yearโs resolutions. Thanks for the encouragement! Is dog kibble too dry for them? I always have some while Iโm walking my dogs. @ct_bergstrom To Live Where Ravens Call @ct_bergstrom We live near the southern roost and feed our crows regularly. We have an old arbor in the back yard and perch a dog dish up there full of puppy chow, peanuts, and other delicious treats, especially during breeding season. They're still skittish about us being in the yard when they are, but they will sit on the arbor & wait for us to come in the kitchen. They make deliberate eye contact before they fly off to a nearby tree. And we do get occasional gifts. @ct_bergstrom A few years ago I was between jobs and used the down time to do garden projects. Iโd often pick up lunch from a fast food chain and eat outside. Iโd give my extra fries to the crows. I wouldnโt call them friends exactly but they knew me. Then one day I was working and I saw a crow flit by and something dropped into the grass beside me. It was a shrimp. A cooked shrimp with tail on, grill lines, and sweet and sour sauce. My crow friends had air dropped me a shrimp. @ct_bergstrom I was making progress befriending the crows in my neighborhood but they won't come to my yard anymore. My guess is it's because of the aggressive blue Jays, fox, and random cat that also spend a lot of time here. I think there's enough food around they didn't want to deal with the drama and I understand but I'm kinda sad about it. @ct_bergstrom no crows here. Our local corvids are ravens (Braidwood, near Canberra). We donโt deliberately feed them, but cohabit nonetheless. Theyโre regularly found in our kitchen and chook pen. I took this blurry pic on the wing one time. (Edited cos theyโre just ravens, not โlittleโ). @ct_bergstrom inspired by this thread, literally the *only* thing i asked for for christmas was a large (25 pound) bag of unsalted peanuts. practicing my potential calls: either โhello crowsโ (i like the internal rhyme) or ใใซใฉในๆฅใ๏ผใ(sounds like ยซ karasu koi ยป, โcome, crows!โ in Japanese). i am about to have so many friends @ct_bergstrom I loved this thread, and I'm going to do this after the new year. Cool birds. @ct_bergstrom my husband and I befriended an injured Common Raven in the Duluth Zoo many years ago. We began playing a sort of "pass the stick" game with it through the bars of its cage. It clearly came to recognize us and would bring a stick to the bars of the cage whenever we saw it. I don't know how many zoo visitors it had trained in this way, but we were thrilled to be able to share some fun with it whenever we saw it. Carl, this is a wonderful thread - thank you so much for taking the time to assemble it and share it with us. We are going to try to befriend our neighborhood crows - and will be sure to not use them for evil. ๐ @ct_bergstrom When I lived in Paulsbo, the crows and seagulls would protect the ducks from the bald eagles by attacking them! @ct_bergstrom They like going after the tail feathers of Red Tailed Hawks in my area. I like crows but when they gang up on Hawks I do get a bit angry at them and am glad when the crows tire of their attack as two against one is just not fair. I know that both crows and hawks are predatory on eggs and young and are territorial. @ct_bergstrom from reading your thread, I am understanding that crows are awesome & beautiful @ct_bergstrom I KNEW IT! There was so much bird drama yesterday on the back balcony (upper NYC) - it was the hawk threatening all the birds (noise, signifying nothing). All the crows got in one tree and just started barking at her like "SHUT UP ALREADY" - I only got the tailend of it on a terribly shot video but you can hear them at least (and a wee bit of the hawk flying away). I remember vividly the Lakota Elder who warned about the inadvisability of pissing crows off, or messing with them when they are in a bad mood. And, IIRC, they're capable of being Quite Creative with their retribution. @ct_bergstrom I was raking leaves a few weeks ago when I heard some birds making a racket. I turned and saw a crow chasing a bald eagle over my neighborโs house. @ct_bergstrom they nest out back and it gets very loud and territorial in summer. Crows are highest in order then swoop in the Magpies then the Jays and in between rush of air from wings the smaller birds. @ct_bergstrom I befriended them with mulch before I even thought of treats. They were stealing it from my plant beds so I made them their own pile. And then they dropped the fledglings off for daycare in the driveway across the alley. I also gave them puddles to play in when it was dry. @ct_bergstrom when I go out on the deck they othen have a scout stationed nearby to announce my presence. Then commence fussing at me to bring food. I always tell them to hold up and wait a bit and then let them know what type of foods I have |
@ct_bergstrom
As to "how much they understand," I feel pretty confident going with "more than you'd expect."