u/Ace_Quantum

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Hello again! I'm here on behalf of my friend DoorBird. When we came home from work and errands, a couple of her babies had fallen out of the nest. Online resources told me the best thing I should do is put them back in the nest, so I put on gloves and did just that. I reached out to a wildlife volunteer network local to my area to ask them for further advice, and this is what they've told me. Something here feels off? I'm not sure what they're describing and messing too closely with the nest feels like it would be a mistake.

Thank you all for your time!

u/Ace_Quantum — 7 days ago

Behold, DoorBird and the best shot I could get at her babies. We haven't touched the nest at all, she built it like that. Yes I'm worried it will come toppiling down, and yes I'd love advice if you have it. We live on the third floor of an apartment complex, so I *really* don't want to move it if the experts don't think we need to. The nest has remained in tact through multiple severe storms, so DoorBird's architectural work must be solid, but I'm still worried.

Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States.

u/Ace_Quantum — 11 days ago
▲ 2 r/birds

Behold, DoorBird and the best shot I could get at her babies. We haven't touched the nest at all, she built it like that. Yes I'm worried it will come toppiling down, and yes I'd love advice if you have it. We live on the third floor of an apartment complex, so things are *extra* dicey if we try to move anything.

Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma, United States

u/Ace_Quantum — 11 days ago