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baby pigeon
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hi could anyone please help as today i had my conifur tree cut down and there was a baby pigeon in it. the baby pigeon is fine but i have no idea how to look after it or help it could some one please help i rather it not die.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm afraid it doesn't look good for the chick, even if you manage to relocate it in the original nest, the parents will most likely be able to tell it has been messed with by humans so they won't return and the babies won't survive. I would suggest in future that you wait until the nesting season is over before you cut down trees! Pigeons eat grains though so you could always try to hand-rear the chick.
Follow buck long's advice. If the squab is feathered the parent will almost certainly come back to feed it if it is in the general vicinity of the nest.
If very small and downy, it is possible to handrear it but you have to get some special mix that is designed for handrearing pigeons. Young get a substance known as pigeon milk from their parents. This is not milk but broken down proventicular (like a stomach) lining specially grown for that purpose when the parent are incubating the eggs.
A substitute is available from the better pet shops for handrearing pigeons. As the young gets older a different mix is gradually needed, but this is still thin enough to administer with a syringe.
When a baby pigeon feeds it sticks its beak into the parent's beak and the food trickles down into its gullet - you may have seen the same action with penguins etc on TV. You must try to emulate this by holding both sides of the beak with your fingers and apply a slight pressure while the syringe end is inserted in the beak. Pigeons will not gape for food like most other young birds, so they are not easy to rear. Once you have managed to feed it for a couple of days the young will be used to your mode of feeding and it will become a lot easier. When you are successful it is a real satisfying feeling.
If very small and downy, it is possible to handrear it but you have to get some special mix that is designed for handrearing pigeons. Young get a substance known as pigeon milk from their parents. This is not milk but broken down proventicular (like a stomach) lining specially grown for that purpose when the parent are incubating the eggs.
A substitute is available from the better pet shops for handrearing pigeons. As the young gets older a different mix is gradually needed, but this is still thin enough to administer with a syringe.
When a baby pigeon feeds it sticks its beak into the parent's beak and the food trickles down into its gullet - you may have seen the same action with penguins etc on TV. You must try to emulate this by holding both sides of the beak with your fingers and apply a slight pressure while the syringe end is inserted in the beak. Pigeons will not gape for food like most other young birds, so they are not easy to rear. Once you have managed to feed it for a couple of days the young will be used to your mode of feeding and it will become a lot easier. When you are successful it is a real satisfying feeling.