My dog just found this baby birdo under the porch. Is there any way to help it?
He does NOT look happy
He's FUCKEN PISSED
>>2173000
either look for the nest or try if he has a feeding response
But usually the ones that drop out of the nest broke something because of the impact and die anyway
>>2173006
but if he sits, it looks good
find the nest op!
>>2173006
He is a funny birdly
>>2173006
Save him pls
Found his senpaitachi
Birdo is home
>>2173000
Drive it to the nearest wildlife rehab center.
>>2173022
well done op
>>2173041
HOWEVER
HE BACK
>>2173166
he looks hungry. gonna have to take care of him op
>>2173171
I brought him back up one more time. If I come back and find him again, I'll take care of him myself.
MOTHERFUCKER
>>2173178
any sign of its parents?
>>2173178
Op, once a bird falls out of its nest, it either keep falling out, or the parents will push it out due to not having enough food to raise an additional chick. Don't take care of it yourself, you don't know what kind of bird it is, and birds aren't easy to raise. Google "wildlife rehab center"in your area, then take him there. They'll raise it and release it.
>>2173174
Thank you for trying to put it back multiple times, but don't take care of it yourself.
Judging from the pictures, that northern mockingbird is pretty dehydrated, and needs to be properly hydrated, and then fed a varied diet every 20 minutes from around 8am to 7pmish. It needs to eat a diet that includes live insects among other things, and it needs to be in a heated environment.
What I'm getting at is that you probably don't have an appropriate incubator and a large supply of mealworms. Thanks for helping it out, and please take it to a rehab center that has the right equipment to save the bird.
>>2173000
You should probably euthanize it.
>>2173227
Sadly the closest rehab center that will take it is nearly a 3 hour drive away. Looks like the poor little guy is on his own.
>>2173284
Does anyone have aviaries nearby? You could take it to that person if the things not dead yet
Looks like a house sparrow to me, they're pretty easy to raise once you get the hang of it. I used this website to successfully raise my first sparrow http://www.starlingtalk.com/babycare.htm#diet
and I've successfully raised all other baby sparrows I've found after that.
They make pretty interesting pets OP, especially when they get really attached to you and from the looks of that one at his age he would Definitely get attached. I say go for it raise the lil guy if you have the time, I wouldn't recommend releasing him though if he's going to be a single bird.
Let nature run its course, dude.....
>>2173413
It's not a sparrow and your advice is terrible. Please kill yourself.
Get it some water and some worms
>>2173640
Not when i got this sleepy qt on me
>>2173284
Stomp on it