I need Dr. Jones to narrate ALL OF THE THINGS please. I love her.
@iz6566Ай бұрын
I’m with you ❤
@divinejusticefeelsgoodАй бұрын
One thing i noticed is that Aussie accent sounds like magpies
@HochspitzАй бұрын
Magpies have been my friends since I first arrived in Australia in 1974. A couple of years later a magpie swooped on my toddler son, drawing a little blood from his scalp. I took him indoors, went back out into the garden armed with a little ball of mincemeat in my hand and waited. Sure enough the bird re-appeared with the warning call. I stood my ground, stretched out my arm and opened my hand to reveal the treat. Watching a bird applying brakes mid flight was quite comical, it was hard not to laugh and remain silent. He gently grabbed the meat and was never a problem again.
@susanfie123429 күн бұрын
brilliant
@vickibrown8490Ай бұрын
I absolutely love magpies & their warbling. I have lived near them for 21 years & never been swooped. Been swooped by a pee-wee, though. Parents have even been brought their young for introductions- what an honour!
@grandmothergooseАй бұрын
I'm surprised it wasn't mentioned that they also have a high degree of social intelligence as well. When a group of researchers tried to track some magpie behaviour by attaching little devices to them, the experiment failed within a couple of days because they quickly figured out how help each other remove the devices. I'd contest that Australian crows and raven would give the magpies a run for their money on intelligence though, with some parrot species not too far behind.
@dizzylizzy7582Ай бұрын
I also love Dr Jones's work. I always click when I see she's made another video. And I love Magpies. Absolutely love them. I have a magpie friend that follows me around in my garden.
@yvonnepagan9912Ай бұрын
If I ever had to leave Australia, I would miss the magpies the most! Their song is music to my ears. We have one who lives nearby and I wake to it’s song most days. You have to be careful how far you want to take your relationship if you get close to a Maggie. It will peck at all your things, poo on your verandah mercilessly, keep tapping on your window until you give it want it wants and bring all its friends and relos who’ll do the same! But they are lovely birds. (Only wombats are naughtier!)
@Fallen4theFallen2Ай бұрын
Yeah, I've learnt that if you feed magpies, they'll turn up with their whole family LMAO
@penneycason9269Ай бұрын
I’m convinced that my original rescue Maggie 25yrs ago has had her family visit us ever more.
@mulgerbillАй бұрын
Oh yes! We've had several generations from the same group bring their youngsters around every year
@janmeyer3129Ай бұрын
@@mulgerbillI love the formal introduction to the new kids each year. It is like a school play, where the kids get shuffled into the front row while the grown-ups line up proudly behind them
@itstruckmeeverydayАй бұрын
Crows and magpies are by far two of the coolest birds on the planet.
@xaero76Ай бұрын
Well... we actually have Ravens as well, so next time you think that you see a Crow, check the features of the bird... Ravens are larger than the crows too, so thats one way to tell the difference... I use to think that we had crows on our farm for decades... but, after checking them out closely, they are actually ravens
@itstruckmeeverydayАй бұрын
@@xaero76 first, I'm American, so I'd imagine "we" doesn't apply to me. Second, I know full well how to distinguish between crows and ravens, and I know what qualities in crows I find so fascinating in order to rank them as one of the coolest birds on the planet.
@peterwilliams2152Ай бұрын
Don't forget the pied currawong!
@HochspitzАй бұрын
@@peterwilliams2152 Or the very large Black Currawongs in Tasmania, real opportunists!
@majorgalahАй бұрын
funnily enough australian magpies aren't actually true magpies, they are their own group closer to currawongs!
@pameladowe2492Ай бұрын
Yes, I have frequently been swooped - maggies spotted me and swoop in for food. If you are kind to them, they will accept you as friends. We had one called Cheeky, he called us to the railing one day and introduced us to 8 little brownies. He had four hens and each had two chicks. When I offered food, he gave permission for the chicks to accept. It was such a wonderful moment, these beautiful gawky babies, accepting the food from my hand with no hesitation.
@PeterToddАй бұрын
That snake was just round the corner from where I live in Nedlands, luckily it's just a black headed python. The maggies around this area are really comfortable around people. I sat and watched one of them set up a performance space inside the local shopping centre and proceeded for a good 10 minutes to sing/mimic every sound and tune it knew. Totally fascinating.
@johndavis7944Ай бұрын
I don't know about being the smartest bird in Australia, but definitely the most admired by many. Once you've had a good relationship with an Australian Magpie, you'll never see them as a threat. They are intelligent and will make friends with you, bring you their young and hang out with you when gardening. All nest building birds use tools. The materials are tools and can include the usual sticks, bits of hurricane wire fencing, wire coat hangers, sheeps wool, spiders web, threads of cotton, bits of packing strap, etcetera, etcetera depending on the type of nest and the spieces of bird building it. I've had many wonderful experiences with the Australian magpie and regard them as my favorite bird.
@brianandrea3249Ай бұрын
We have so many amazing birds, but the Magpie is pretty close to the top of my list of favourites. Their carolling early in the morning is just a beautiful way to be woken up.
@TraumaQueen65Ай бұрын
We love our local Maggies. There's a little trio of fellas who keep us company nearly every evening. Chaos when they bring their mates tho
@KatieDeGoАй бұрын
When Dr Jones said the thing about magpies in vests, it filled me with the most joy I've been filled with in so long! 😊
@AnneMorrishАй бұрын
Magpies are the most amazing beautiful creatures. Keep up the great work Dr Jones, we love your informative posts & shows 😊
@tmmtmmАй бұрын
They might be smart but not *that* smart. My local male maggie attacks his reflection in the window almost every morning 😂
@andrewclough660Ай бұрын
So he's tricked you again. One day that window will break and he will have you. He knows your talking shite about him too...just letting you know!
@tmmtmmАй бұрын
@@andrewclough660 Hahaha. He's a kind soul, comes and checks for worms when I dig in the garden ❤
@Dave-Rough-Diamond-DunnАй бұрын
You sure it's not a "Murray Magpie"? They're the smaller magpie looking birds that become obsessed with their reflections in windows.
@tmmtmmАй бұрын
@@Dave-Rough-Diamond-Dunn Definitely a magpie, not a magpie-lark :)
@Dave-Rough-Diamond-DunnАй бұрын
@@tmmtmm That's pretty unusual for a Magpie, that's why I asked. Maybe yours is a bit 'special'!😁
@tdb7992Ай бұрын
When the ABC ran their bird of the year poll, I voted for the magpie (kookaburra and fairy wrens are some other favourites of mine). Their song is just beautiful to hear on a crisp morning.
@Steve-ei2vhАй бұрын
I made friends with all the magpies in my local area by stopping and having a chat with any near me. One young bird. (Still some brown feathers ) would drop by close for a chat. And a piece of bacon. And one day, he was singing away to me only feet away, and a wattle bird flew down and swooped him, causing him to fall over in fright. I swear to God his parents. Close by, let out what could be described as a huge belly laugh. From then on, his chats involved lots of looking around and a little less concentrating on me....
@BradGryphonnАй бұрын
I so want to spend half an hour writing down all my good and bad experiences for your entertainment. However, they started 55 years ago, and there are many. Awesome birds.
@trevordickson8617Ай бұрын
I understand Magpies can give people a bit of a fright when it's nesting season, but that's all. If they do make contact with your head they usually don't hurt or do much damage....usually. People screaming & yelling is what causes most of the commotion. Love what you do Ann. 👍
@fairhall001Ай бұрын
Twice I have stopped a magpie attacking someone by throwing food out the car window. It could be they are attacking because they are being interrupted foraging for food for their baby as well as them having it in for Carlton supporters/collaborators.
@penguinvic9892Ай бұрын
Few greater honours are magpie parents introducing their young to you for the first time. Needless-to-say if magpies see you as “user friendly” you’ll never, ever get swooped by them. I once rescued an injured male magpie with the fearsome nickname as “The Beak”. After that it loved me. Would even perch on my knee when I was seated on a bench. If you help a magpie in need, you end up with a friend for life !!
@denniscampbell6697Ай бұрын
Our family have never been attacked by these birds .they fly down and are always friendly .💜
@browdserАй бұрын
This was great! The one thing I wish was mentioned is on top of just how FEW magpies actually swoop is that swooping is a learned behavior. Children can learn it from their parents if a parent is a swooper, or if a human is aggressive to them (chasing/yelling/getting close to the nest). They are really the sweetest birds and will let you get extremely close if you're nonthreatening.
@wellingtonsboots4074Ай бұрын
Thank you Dr Jones for another great video. Magpies have to be my favourite bird. I used to feed them mincemeat and looked forward to them serenading me on the front porch. However, I came to think better of it and now I really miss their concerts every day. I only get swooped by Myna birds and I loathe them
@AW-pz3qcАй бұрын
I love Maggies and find their warbling very soothing. Maggie family nested in a high tree near our house would come and sit for morning coffee on the back deck and, as usual, I would talk to it and request a song, of course after it obliged I would get some pet mince (bought specially for visiting birds) from the fridge and Maggie would follow me into the kitchen and sit on the stool watching to make sure I didn't renege on the deal. Talk about hilarious! then I took the mince back to the deck where it would take chunks back to the nest to feed the chicks and continue this until that serving of mince was finished. During breeding season this happened many times each day and they would sit on the ensuite window sill to wake me for an early morning brekkie. Such beautiful birds with a great personality.
@crystalwoods334Ай бұрын
I had the local magpies help me evict a pigeon that nested on my balcony once the very noisy chicks were gone. Whenever it was crappy cold weather I'd feed them, but not otherwise so they wouldn't get dependent. They brought 3 generations of fledglings up to meet me before I had to move. No matter where I go, I look them in the eye and say hello, and I've never been swooped.
@PraetorianAUАй бұрын
They are my favorite bird in Australia. I haven't been swooped by one in a few decades. I always try to befriend any in my local area. When I go for walks and I come across some, I whistle to them as I walk by. If they are in the ground foraging for food, I will often just sit near by an watch them. They have gotten use to me over the years. Their young ones are always curious so they come close to me. The parents usually don't care as they are familiar with me.
@yogibarista2818Ай бұрын
Cockatoos would give them a run for their money in the smarts department. The buggers that flip the lid on my wheelie bin are a case in point.
@stuartleslie5421Ай бұрын
I've spent some years tracking and video recording lyrebirds at Dorrigo National Park where there are some pretty tame ones, and there is no doubt I am fascinated and more than a bit obsessed by them. But I still regard magpies as the best bird in the history of birds, despite them swooping me on my bike (though grey butcherbirds are worse). As birds go, simply The Best.
@davepasternАй бұрын
got swooped 2 weeks ago at Wivenhoe dam - no warning cries. It's right wing clipped my left ear ole. It then landed in a branch in a tree around 15m in front of me. It was at this point of time that I acknowledged defeat, looked the magpie in the eye and slowly backed away back to my car. I'm now 55 and haven't been swooped since I was like 12 or 13.
@bigpapadrewАй бұрын
i lived overseas, by coincidence, for 4 years from 2018 to 2022.... i never felt like i was home again until i heard the warble of magpies. so so good.
@djdazzydeaf7568Ай бұрын
You're 100% correct about the magpie facial recognition. One of my mates had a magpie lived near his house and he fed the magpie occasionally and whenever he took his son to the local playground there will be people getting swooped by a magpie but never him and his son, later he found out it might've been the same magpie that he fed before
@michellebrennan1298Ай бұрын
i love your story telling i this came out on sunday it would cheered up my birthday
@SwissMissssАй бұрын
My birthday was Sunday! Happy Birthday!!
@wombat.6652Ай бұрын
Happy birthday, both of you. BUT please don't tell the entire cyber world your birthday. It is one more data point that scammers can use against us. 2 - it sets a bad example for younger people, who can get hunted by predators. Usually the next question is like "oh so how old are you now"......
@sabinemagpieАй бұрын
I love magpies ❤
@glenpantlin8291Ай бұрын
I have a flock of around 30 to 40 magpies that come and visit me everyday I’ve been off work due to an injury for about a year now and they keep me sane . I will go outside and talk to them give them some food when I go out for the day they have scouts at the end of my street and they recognise my wife’s and my cars by the time I’m getting out of the car they’re there waiting for me I love their company.
@Lori-PAXАй бұрын
What can't people understand about swooping magpies? It's similar to strangers filing through a human baby's nursery? 🐦⬛❤️
@basilpunton5702Ай бұрын
A friend moved to Canberra in 1979 and he had a magpie swoop several times. He rang the administration wildlife people. The woman on the phone said that she would send him pamphlet, he wondered if something to wave at the maggie. It was 'How To Make Friends With Your Magpie' and was sensible advice. Just give him a little bit of food (not alot), he will then consider you a friend. This was done and never swooped again. On our farm we had a large mob of magpies, they never worried us, but one day a border collie was swooped. This dog being sensible took a short time to look about and find the nest. He then turned away while keeping an eye the bird. Once the swooping stopped. He used the tree as reference point and went around the tree and waited for me. I walked past the tree, no attack. 🎉 But I never did work out how the dog knew that he had to find the nest, and to use that information. Sheepdogs often show amazing knowledge.
@kaydenscott6331Ай бұрын
I once helped a young magpie that fell into a bush in a really awkward way & after that none of the magpies near my house swooped me during swooping season.
@geoffreygalbraith3533Ай бұрын
I once watched a magpie give itself a seesaw by starting at the ground end and walking up to the high end at which point it's weight caused the seesaw to go down at which point the magpie turned and did it again and again
@lindsaydrewe8219Ай бұрын
They are too smart for The Block😂😂 Maggie’s, all the Corvids and Raptors are just amazing birds. Not that I have anything against the cute little feathery fluffs, but I find the level of intelligence in the others just breathtaking. Love your work❤❤
@stephencox4224Ай бұрын
Not only Magpies I remember diving Sydney harbour with a group of about 15 and one guy tweaked the tail of a Wobbygong Shark, Well that shark knew exactly who grabbed it's tail and headbutted him for the rest of the dive. About 40 minutes later when we got out of the water that goose was covered in bruises from the Wobbygong getting it's revenge
@pollywaffledoodah3057Ай бұрын
The early Australian settlers first called them 'flute birds' before they were called magpies - and you can hear why. 'Quardle wardle ordle doodle ardle wardle!'
@jeanaprewitt9658Ай бұрын
I almost want to live in Australia despite everything being out to eradicate human life, just so I could hear and see magpies. I love them so much!
@shirleyellis9708Ай бұрын
Great one interesting video.
@anthonyburke5656Ай бұрын
Maggie’s aren’t “raised” by their parents! The “child raising” is done by the youngsters of the flock! The nesting sites dictate who/how many pairs in an area can mate, so the juvenile and “young” birds who are waiting for a nesting site to become available, take up the child rearing tasks once the birds leave the nest.
@joannecormierableАй бұрын
Oh my lordy I know what podcast I'm binging next!!!!
@hanhmoon1731Ай бұрын
I remember when I was riding my bike as a child, I was swooped and the magpie actually grabbed my ear with its beak and drew blood… it didn’t affect my opinion on them though.. I still love the swoopy bois haha
@meee6836Ай бұрын
I love magpies. I had one that used to come to me for feeding. She would land at the front of the house then wander right through the house to the fridge and stand there and wait to be fed. lol. I thought she was a male till she brought her baby to meet me. She would answer to her name too.
@shirleyellis9708Ай бұрын
You wouldn't be laughing if that was you getting attacked. 😮
@cycoholicАй бұрын
I remember coming home from a trip overseas for the first time, but it wasn't until only a street away from home did it actually feel like I was home, when I heard the local magpies singing. Not only can you learn to recognize the local magpies patterns, but their songs change as well.
@mtgoat1016Ай бұрын
I reckon the crow's are smarter for the simple reason you rarely see crow's as road kill but unfortunately I see a lot of magpies dead on the road, and quite often you see crow's eating road kill but are smart enough to get out of the way.
@xaero76Ай бұрын
I have never ever had any issues with Magpies... we have always shown them respect
@MartinDolanАй бұрын
I always say hello to magpies and mimic their song. Never been swooped. The family at the local dog park fly over when they see me and land on my arm or shoulder. They are so beautiful, smart and all have very distinct personalities. They also love to pay. I was sitting on the ground with my legs stretched out and picked up a twig and went tap tap tap on the ground with it. Then I put the twig on my leg. One of the magpies jumped up on my leg, picked up the twig and went tap tap tap with it on my leg. ❤❤❤
@shirleyellis9708Ай бұрын
Touch wood I never heard that sound. I just say hello to them when I walk by them.😂
@nancycurtis7315Ай бұрын
I've lived on my 20 acres, for 25 years. I have one magpie that hates me! Out of about 20 here. Only nesting season. He has connected twice. He then lands within a metre of me and swears at me. While he waits for his breakfast! LOL Have a wonderful day. Greetings from the Little DESERT region of Victoria, Australia. 😊
@darthphilfyАй бұрын
I have 3 magpies out the front of my house that come into my garage to visit and get food. They never swoop us or most adults, but there are a few of the kids from the local school who they really have it in for during nesting season.
@diceman199Ай бұрын
one story I heard about them was some researchers put location tracking devices on them that they couldn't remove themselves. So the birds removed each others harnesses
@chriswatson7965Ай бұрын
Not all magpies give a warning before attacking. With some they are quite deliberately silent, give no warning swoop and the first thing you know is that you've been given a heavy wack. What warning they give is highly variable, it depends on the magpie, though for most magpies there is a particular chortle that they give.
@southron_d1349Ай бұрын
Outside videos like this, I've never seen a Magpie swoop on anyone. There's a pair whose territory includes my garden. They watch when I'm gardening in the hope I turn up something for them. One day, three young ones raced up to me and stood in a neat line thinking I had food for them. I didn't so they just trotted off and went back to their foraging. I don't feed the Magpies - certainly wouldn't give them minced meat. Like all our native species, they're a joy to have around.
@sventer198Ай бұрын
I love them! You give them some grubs once and they will never swoop you and neither will their mob, and their song is like chimes.
@spectre-8Ай бұрын
Don’t ravens and crows also use tools and problem solving? To a higher degree than magpies?
@abmbarryКүн бұрын
I really like Magpies. They walk into my home from the deck, Every year they bring their new famalies and introduce them, They land and sit on me and often just sit down and chortle to me for quite some time. I have a big Standard Poodle, She is very gentle, often the maggies just walk under her when coming to get a wee munchie. Too far to walk round her I guess? When you get accepted as their frend, it's for life. They become so gentle and love to play.
@weka2005Ай бұрын
I am in New Zealand. Magpies are often despised here. People are always going on about them swooping on them. I have never been swooped by a magpie, ever. I love them. Tenacious buggers. Not scared of anything.
@anserbauer309Ай бұрын
The maggies at my place have been at war with the guineafowl for about a decade now. Sometimes I'll hear the guineafowl going off their heads and send the dogs out, thinking it's a fox (and sometimes it is), but often enough it's just the maggies swooping the guineas from a tree or fencepost and the guineas charging them on the ground. I only ever saw a proper punch-on once between them. At the end of it, there were rather more maggie feathers spread around the driveway than guinea feathers, but thankfully, no one was seriously injured.
@kosh661225 күн бұрын
I made friends with my local magpies this year. Wow.. they started recognising me very quickly. I saw one in the tree out front using a stick to dig out insects under the bark. I have tried everything to drive out Indian Myna's... it turns out making friends with magpies has finally done the trick!
@pippajesse6807Ай бұрын
I love my mob of local maggies❤ I have a family of 5 that year after year they literally knock on my front door with their beak 😊I especially love it when they bring their babies for the first time visits....it's like they're saying "this lady is safe don't attack her she has good safe healthy snacks 😂❤
@pippajesse6807Ай бұрын
Forgot to mention I know them all by their markings & ticks sadly ....although the ticks don't seem to harm them 🤔🫶🏼...each have a name according to their individual personality 😊
@pippajesse6807Ай бұрын
Also funniest day was when two of the babies used banana fronds to ride on, took turns to pull the other along on the big leaf 🤣🤣
@suekimpton7874Ай бұрын
I have a male magpie living near me or I live in his place but he has thwarted every attempt I make to protect my finch. I covered my whole back porch with shade cloth and netting and went out in my car - magpie watches me leave and then is found under my net system looking at my finch - no damage this time and magpie removed but he makes me feel thwarted.
@mojrimibnharb4584Ай бұрын
Laughing at animal assisted child abuse is the most aussie thing ever.
@itt2055Ай бұрын
The street I live on has a family of around 10 magpies and they are quite friendly. When anyone mowes their lawn, they will follow them to get the bugs that are exposed. They regularly go around my garage feeding the spiders to their young. They do acknowledge that I am there but don't seem to care.
@jobond3317Ай бұрын
We don't like magpies in NZ, but I do. I love their vocalisation and cheeky nature. However, I did have one problem with them drive-bombing me. Stop that with a water bottle. I gave them a good squirt of water as they raced down to get me. Well, that stops in mid-flight. They never tried it again and there were magpies still here.
@joannemurdock7899Ай бұрын
❤ Magpies be kind to them , they appreciate fresh mince and meally worms leave a bird bath out for all birds❤ give back to nature birds wildlife they do it tough!
@samshepherd26Ай бұрын
I got swooped by a handsome but angry magpie this morning while I was riding my bicycle . It's quite terrifying
@jamesmcgowen1769Ай бұрын
I love ‘em! I’d love to teach one how to say G’day mate… Because nearly everyone walking past his tree would reply ‘ how yer goin ‘ 🤣
@royferntorpАй бұрын
I always talk to my local Maggies. Never been swooped.
@lexidiusBSАй бұрын
Would not be surprised. I have two females that know my daily commute to town and back and they know what days I restock on food, so the tamer of the two sisters follows me down the street when she sees me getting close and waits on my front doormat for me screaming bloody murder at me until she gets her weekly dose of sliced strawberries. Eats out of my hands sometimes as well, when I'm not encouraging her to go find her own food.
@dash8brjАй бұрын
You can train magpies to be your friends or stay clear of you. In my case as a kid I was walking home with a couple of mates after playing cricket. One had the stumps, I had the ball and the other had the bat. Being a little more sweaty than most kids I also had a can of anti perpirant in my school bag. We always got swooped walking past a park on the way home. First the male maggie picked on cricket bat boy, and nearly got clobbered in the beak by the bat. Then it decided to try its luck on stumps boy, and he was armed with javelin missiles, all of which missed. All I had was a cricket ball, I put it into my pocket and pulled out the can of anti pirspirant. Birdy boy comes in, cops a spray in the face and went back to its perch. he never swooped us again. I have a group of resident magpies in my area whom I feed mince. They're cheeky buggers but super friendly.
@carriemitchell3020Ай бұрын
Many years ago I saw, probably a dozen or so, magpies on a neighbour's clothes line. They didn't notice me at first but I saw one of them grab onto the bottom edge of a t-shirt or something with its beak and start spinning itself around using its own body weight for momentum. Might have been a one off but then a couple of others started doing the same thing!! It was quite a spectacle to watch. When they eventually noticed me they all stopped and stared. Uh oh......run 😅
@drfill9210Ай бұрын
I totally don't feed the magpies, that would be wrong. But is amazing how they can catch food in their beaks. A friend told me...😇
@jacquelineandersen4600Ай бұрын
Love your work ❤
@wati52Ай бұрын
I love seeing a Tidings of Bare Nosed Flute Players.
@jessmiller6577Ай бұрын
love Maggies, Thanks Dr. Anne
@GaryNoone-jz3mqАй бұрын
Annie, that was a cricket match, not a football match. (we don't use cricket stumps for football)
@Serge1074Ай бұрын
Loved it,,,thank you very much 😊😅
@nobletarabas1Ай бұрын
I just love her! 😍🥰
@etmax1Ай бұрын
I think magpies are smarter than crows, because if I'm walking and there's a crow on the ground as soon as I get within 30m or less they take off and expend a lot of energy going into a tree, but with magpies if I don't look at them I can walk right past them with in a metre even and they continue doing what they were doing. If I look at them they behave like the crows. Both have similar problem solving ability as described here, so to me them understanding the difference between someone just walking or walking in their direction maintaining eye contact is a big thing. The other one is that they swoop dogs when they're off the leash but not when they're leashed, in fact when I walk my dog on the leash they don't even move away.
@JimmiAlliАй бұрын
Some magpies swoop my poor dog, but never me?
@cassieoz1702Ай бұрын
It would be helpful if they always gave a warning before they swoop, but they don't. I've sewn up too many scalp and face wounds and my second cousin (riding a bike aged 5) lost an eye.
@iffracemАй бұрын
AFAIK, the Tasmanian sub species don't aggressively defend their nesting territory like the various mainland sub species. It's unheard of here.
@boots3066Ай бұрын
Magpies, Butcherbirds...never been swooped. I just have a conversation with them...even ones I meet for the first time. Sometimes they follow me for more interaction - as if they want to know more about this hooman who had a friendly chat.They also communicate with others of the species if the human is naughty or nice. Too smart.
@wademellor5304Ай бұрын
A magpie dive bombed me at least 10 times today 🚲 on my bike 😂 same one, in same spot hated me last year too 🫥 off to see psych about magpie PTSD 🤣🤣
@AriandduАй бұрын
Tool use in birds does lead to the question - were there tool using dinosaurs?
@johnellison3030Ай бұрын
Whenever I see birds using tools, it always reminds me of "The Silurian Hypothesis" and how birds are related to Dinosaurs. Dinosaurs existed for millions of years and maybe they did evolve intellectually whilst they were on the Earth. But the evidence of that has disappeared over the intervening millions of aeons.
@jay6817Ай бұрын
Mean dad 😅😢😅. I do the magpie whistle when I approach the area which tells them that I'm another magpie. For some strange reason it works and they never swoop me that time or any future time but they swoop everybody else.
@HISSY200Ай бұрын
Great clip love Maggie's, but are Crow's even smarter?
@anthonyburke5656Ай бұрын
Magpies and Crows are magnificent birds, ever notice their territories don’t tend to overlap? Maggie’s are a lot more territorial. Maggie’s don’t “swoop” friends, make friends with your local birds, give them treats greet them and talk.
@glennbabic5954Ай бұрын
I nearly took a baby magpie home because it was on the ground and I thought a cat might take it, but I realised the parents were around and I let it be. Not like these other people that take them from the wild and post videos about how they saved an abandoned baby bird.
@MegaPeedeeАй бұрын
I love the sound of maggies. It is wonderful to wake up to them in the early mornings. When I served in Vietnam I truly missed hearing their chortling songs. That and gum tress were the two things I missed the most.
@steve_j_grundonАй бұрын
Pretty sure that juvenile magpie is on its back _because_ it is getting picked on by the other two. At least, _very_ similar behaviour can be observed when adults tell their chicks that _"it's time to move out."_
@DanDownunda8888Ай бұрын
That bit was a clip from the KZbin channel called The Magpie Whisperer. Lots of vids of adult and juvenile maggies playing.
@divinejusticefeelsgoodАй бұрын
One thing i noticed is that the aussie accent sounds like magpies.