Two things...
1. What the hell is up with LJ lately? I am not a happy Connie.
2. Ooh, an explanation on the Klingon thing? Gotta watch, gotta see.
Oh, and edit!
Question. Yesterday, I saw the most gorgeous pigeon, pure white. Gorgeous rock dove, not pigeon, whatever. Anyway, I've noticed that a lot of pigeons are missing feet or have very sick feet. What seems to happen is that they somehow get string wrapped around their feet. This string presumably cuts of circulation, and eventually the foot is lost.
They can survive with a stump, I've seen them, but it worries me. Does anybody know how this happens? Or how I can capture them, subdue them, and remove the string without harming the pigeon?
2. Ooh, an explanation on the Klingon thing? Gotta watch, gotta see.
Oh, and edit!
Question. Yesterday, I saw the most gorgeous pigeon, pure white. Gorgeous rock dove, not pigeon, whatever. Anyway, I've noticed that a lot of pigeons are missing feet or have very sick feet. What seems to happen is that they somehow get string wrapped around their feet. This string presumably cuts of circulation, and eventually the foot is lost.
They can survive with a stump, I've seen them, but it worries me. Does anybody know how this happens? Or how I can capture them, subdue them, and remove the string without harming the pigeon?
no subject
no subject
Firstly, they tend to live inside the ferry terminal, where there are no high voltage wires. In fact, I don't think there are any high voltage wires anywhere inside Manhattan, so...
Secondly, a quick google search confirmed my hypothesis. LJ is messed up, so I'm not leaving to find the links, but at least some pigeons lose feet due to string.
Third, I've seen the process. Healthy bird has string around his/her foot, tightly wrapped. Foot degenerates. Foot disappears. I've seen this often enough to see a connection between string/twine and foot loss.
no subject
http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~picas/pigrec/#CATCHING
Here's info on catching pigeons for recovery.
no subject
All that effort for naught. *grins*
Thanks for the linky.
no subject
Let's hope that this appears....
no subject
I'm guessing the string is due to them pecking for food in garbage and/or getting strings to build their nests with and getting them tangled mid-flight.
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Firstly, they tend to live inside the ferry terminal, where there are no high voltage wires. In fact, I don't think there are any high voltage wires anywhere inside Manhattan, so...
Secondly, a quick google search confirmed my hypothesis. LJ is messed up, so I'm not leaving to find the links, but at least some pigeons lose feet due to string.
Third, I've seen the process. Healthy bird has string around his/her foot, tightly wrapped. Foot degenerates. Foot disappears. I've seen this often enough to see a connection between string/twine and foot loss.
no subject
http://homepages.nildram.co.uk/~picas/pigrec/#CATCHING
Here's info on catching pigeons for recovery.
no subject
All that effort for naught. *grins*
Thanks for the linky.
no subject
Let's hope that this appears....
no subject
I'm guessing the string is due to them pecking for food in garbage and/or getting strings to build their nests with and getting them tangled mid-flight.
no subject
no subject