Birds

Mr.Cyan said:
I spend a lot of time in nature birdwatching - as it gives me great "soul food"; and contentment. Most of the time the bird behaviors that I observe are very human in nature; and not sometimes what you would expect from 2D animals. I often also see little birds attacking predators fearlessly to defend their nest; save their friends, or just making a defensive statement by standing their ground. I too am just amazed at the bravery of the behavior. Sometimes the predators are way bigger - but yet the small passerines hover exactly behind their head, slightly above their wings, relentless attacking them to defend their turf, disregarding their own safety. Behaving truly with connectedness and feelings - but yet we are told Birds don't really "think" like that.

This may be just nature - but I feel that spending time observing nature is itself truly educational, and can teach us a lot about 3D,4D and life itself.

I agree, nature is our best teacher, and sometimes you have to dig around to see it, yet so much is there to see. I've caught many of your photo examples of our 2d world and appreciate them, so thanks.

Oxajil said:
Another possibility is that the little bird was fatally injured by another big bird or another predator, and the raven saw it, and went for it so to speak when it was abandoned. Ravens can be very observant, and he may have seen what happened, and then went in.

Yes, that cannot be discounted, it could also be the result of an accident - flying into something adjacent with the Raven being observant, as you said, and opportunistic thereafter.

As for corvids in general, had just noticed in and around the Vancouver, BC areas, that Crow attacks (or defensive interactions) are on the rise with humans - this appears to be related to protecting their young, it may also not be so localized in the areas indicated, it's just not being reported; not sure. However, if indeed it is on the rise, it's a little strange. Makes me think of all the manifestations of our 2d's reacting to "hyperkinetic sensate" conditions (wave approach), as humans seem to be doing.

This GIS teacher started tracking these attacks and mapped them.

https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/yp3bgk/crow-attacks-have-gotten-so-bad-that-this-scientist-built-a-tool-to-map-the-carn

This is just one of some 896 bird-human altercations documented on a map built by Langara College instructor Jim O'Leary to document crow attacks in Vancouver and Victoria BC. O'Leary told me he was inspired to create it after witnessing several crow attacks on the leafy streets of downtown Vancouver. He'd be at work, and a colleague would complain they'd just been targeted.

"People were coming in after getting whacked on the head" after being dive-bombed by a bird, he said. The attacks are especially severe at this time of year, he believes, when crows are aggressively protecting their young.
 
An amusing story about our black avian friends.

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Ravens stealing groceries in parking lot of Alaskan store


Marnie Jones and her husband made it all the way home from the South Anchorage Costco before they realized they’d been robbed.

“We had bought a four-pack of filet mignon steak,” Jones said. “It was on the bottom of the cart, and he was pushing it through the bumpy snow.”

When they reached their vehicle, the meat slid onto the ground. Her husband turned his back to load groceries before realizing the pack had slipped. When they got home and put everything away, he noticed he was one steak short.

Then, it clicked.

“He said, ‘Oh my God, after I picked up that pack of steaks, I saw a raven in the parking lot with a steak in his mouth,’” Jones said.

They’re not the only ones to lose groceries to ravens at the Dimond Boulevard store.

Olani Saunoa was finishing a shopping trip there last winter, buckling her baby in a car seat. That’s when a raven swooped in and swiped some short ribs from her cart.

“He had picked up the entire package of short ribs, like flying away with it,” Saunoa said.

The same thing happened this spring — only this time, it was more than one, and they chose a different cut of meat.

“I’ve been here my entire life, dealt with the ravens, but never ever had this happen to me, ever,” Saunoa said. “The first time we thought, ‘Once in a lifetime kind of thing, this is never going to happen again.’ But sure enough a year later, same Costco. This year, it was a pack of pork ribs that they had gotten into.”

Last month, Matt Lewallen was packing his purchases into his car and lost a single short rib from his cart.

“They know what they’re doing; it’s not their first time,” Lewallen said. “They’re very fat so I think they’ve got a whole system there.”

When he drove home to make dinner, he noticed that the ravens had pecked one of the other ribs.

“I cut that meat out and started marinating it and my wife said, ‘That’s gross, we should take it back,’” Lewallen said. “Costco actually took it back even after we had started marinating them and gave us a full refund.”

Stories of the pilfering Costco ravens have spread on social media.

“My parents were minding their business after a shop and made it home with one less steak!” Kimberly Waller wrote on Facebook recently. “The bird snatched it right out of the pack in the parking lot.”

Anchorage resident Tamara Josey replied to Waller’s post, calling the ravens “calculating.” She had a similar experience about a month ago.

“I had two ravens, one that was on the car next to me and he kept squawking really loud,” Josey said in an interview. “He would sit on the car and stare at me, then hop next to the bed of the truck on the other side, and he kept going back and forth. The other raven was on the ground. He kept trying to pull — I had those little mini-melons you have in the mesh baggies — he kept trying to grab the netting and pull my melons off the cart.”

One of the ravens started to fly around Josey until she shooed them off.

“He was waiting for another opportunity to grab the melons off the cart, but they never were deterred,” she said. “They just stayed posted, waiting for their next opportunity to steal something out of my cart.

“They are very dedicated to their mission.”

A Dimond Costco manager declined to comment on the parking lot raven theft issue.

Rick Sinnott, a former Anchorage area wildlife biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, said hundreds of ravens fly to Anchorage from all over the state in the winter for food. When spring comes, most of them leave. In the past, Sinnott estimated the city’s winter raven population as a couple thousand.

The Anchorage Audubon Society counts birds every December. The group recorded 923 common ravens in 2018; 621 in 2019; and 750 in 2020. These include ravens that stay in the city year-round as well as birds from out of town.

As Anchorage has grown over the years, so has the amount of garbage, Sinnott said, making the city a hot spot for meat bandits.

“They’re not starving to death,” Sinnott said. “Ravens do very well in this city, but they much prefer — I would guess if I was thinking like a raven — a package of short ribs from Costco to half of a hamburger bun from McDonald’s.”

Sinnott said ravens are social learners, meaning they watch other birds to learn.

“That’s their niche in the world — that’s how they get around,” Sinnott said. “For years, decades, they’ve watched people in parking lots of grocery stores with all this food. They know what a piece of fruit looks like in a grocery cart because they’ve seen it on the ground or seen it in a garbage can.”

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Cue victory roll -

 
They are smart critters. It might not be long before they learn their way into and around Costco stores, without a membership or a stop at the cashier lines. Heck, they might quietly set up shop in there.
I read a hilarious book quite a while ago where the author was comically describing how everything in the natural world terrified him. It was all made up, just so you know. He said that he expected crows to come into his house and pistol-whip him and leave with all of the food and any shiny stuff they happened to come across. :-D The true mobsters of the animal kingdom.
 

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