Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider yourself fortunate that it is not a raven making all the noise! I volunteer at a bird sanctuary where we have a male raven in captivity. He will scream, croak, and squawk for five hours straight during mating season (early March-early June). There is a wild female in the woods nearby and she does the same thing. You can hear them from over 100 feet away.
Dear goodness, let him out already!
Anonymous wrote:Consider yourself fortunate that it is not a raven making all the noise! I volunteer at a bird sanctuary where we have a male raven in captivity. He will scream, croak, and squawk for five hours straight during mating season (early March-early June). There is a wild female in the woods nearby and she does the same thing. You can hear them from over 100 feet away.
Anonymous wrote:The early morning birds would be the thing that would make me turn my indoor cat into an outdoor one.
No, I don't find their car alarm "song" charming or peaceful.
Anonymous wrote:There is a mourning dove outside our window making doe-eyes at our cockatiel. She's so in love. He is sort of fascinated.
Not relevant, but just thought I'd mention.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is a bird singing loud as he'll out my window at 12:30am in the morning? Help! How do I tell him to go to bed??
Leave the bird alone. It has a right to sing. If your tender ears can't take this, close your window. Your kids make more annoying noise than the bird.