orbdogs:

my worst experience in college is a former friend who released their pet rats into “the wild” at the end of the year because they couldn’t take care of them over the summer. i, a rat owner, was told this at the end of summer, 3 months after i could have adopted them and saved them from a horrible death on a college campus with lots of predators and little food for lab rats that have only ever known their cozy little nests in their cozy little cages

domesticated animals are very different from wild animals in almost every way and cannot survive without human help. dogs are not wolves. domesticated birds are not wild birds. rats need other rats to function socially and a lone rat or even pair of rats can’t survive or function alone. it’s like a lone ant. they need their colony… which is their fucking owners. to my rats and my dogs i’m this magical god of abundance who brings them food and medicine and toys and plays with them and tickles their bellies every day. your rats have a better life in your living room munching on broccoli than as hawk food. don’t be an idiot

Pet birds should never be released.

bee-menagerie:

flock-o-tiels:

wordsonbirds:

fishefishefishee:

whitecoatheadspace:

I’m just going to talk about this for a moment because I’ve seen so many people who think it’s kind to release captive birds. Even recently, there’s a pet store I visit frequently to spend time with the conures, and they suspect a family may have bought 5 budgerigars so their kids could release them. If they did, those birds have starved to death by now.

Birds sold as pets are born in captivity (and usually have a leg band to prove it, unless the owner took it off), most likely very far from their native countries, and do not know what food looks like apart from seeds, pellets, and cut up fruit and vegetables in bowls. If there even is anything outside that they could eat, they won’t know to look for it.

Apart from that, they may not be able to survive in the climate they get released into.

If they came from a home with other pets, they may see someone else’s pet and not know that it may hurt them.

Not to mention the fact that you shouldn’t be introducing any non native animals where they don’t belong.

I’ve also seen people who take great care of their birds and have a great bond with them, like Gotcha and his mom, and still get comments about how they should set them free. The bird does not want to leave it’s person. I’m sure that even if they did release it, it would just sit in the yard waiting for them to bring it back in. Most birds even need mental stimulation and interaction from people that they could not get by themselves. Keep in mind that the birds we raised are different from wild birds. They grew up knowing people and toys and other captive birds, not large wild flocks of their own kind. Which probably won’t be around anyways. Your cockatiel does not want to live with the sparrows outside. It wants it’s human.

That being said, if your bird gets out by accident, it is probably still nearby. Set out some food bowls and see if they find it.

Anyways, there’s my rant. Take care of your birbs. Birbs are good friends.

reblog to save a birb

You can also put their cage or travel cage

outside with the food and water. Giving them a familiar and secure feeling place to land can be important for some hesitant birds. 

Please don’t release parrots, nonnative birds, and captive raised birds into the wild! Most will die, but feral populations of nonnative species can be problematic.

Remember too that parrots don’t fly away from home to be “free”. When a bird escapes from a home, its not because it longs for the great wide blue. It leaves under an instinctual assumption that it can return. However, the sounds, sights, and other stimuli of the world outside is overwhelming for a small bird who has never lived out there. Even a gust of wind can make it difficult for an untrained bird to glide back towards home–and it may carry the bird further and further away.

These birds find themselves thrown into an environment they’ve never been in before, with stimuli theyve never experienced. Consider: most birds get anxious over being introduced to a new toy. The terror they must feel upon finding themselves in a completely unknown open space shared with countless unknowns things and sounds–I can’t imagine it being a good time.

Don’t release pet birds. Unless they are found by someone who takes them in, they likely won’t survive it, and the time leading up to their death is a horrifying experience.

official-deutschland:

valtharr:

Whenever you ask “is there a ridiculously long German word for [X]?”, the answer is either “yes” or “not officially, but I can quickly build you one if you want”

Like for example a word describing this phenomenon could be “Wortzusammensetzungsmöglichkeit”. It didn’t exist before but now I made it up and people know what I mean when they read it.