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#781352 - 09/06/12 04:16 AM
Re: Your favorite companion bird and why?
[Re: Diana - Birds Editor]
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Newbie
Registered: 05/16/11
Posts: 48
Loc: Divide, CO
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I have cared for finches for some 22 years now - mostly Zebra finches, but also society finches, owl finches, and spice finches. I cannot work in my study without the chirps of the females and the songs of the males (which they learn from their elders). The beautiful songs of our oldest finch, Winston, Jr., was learned from his Dad and which he has now taught to the two younger males that live here. One rather strange thing I do is to open one of the four cages early each evening to let the birds fly around my study (600 square feet). When I retire and turn out the lights, they invariably fly back into their cages and nests. Best wishes, Z. G. Standing Bear in Divide, Colorado USA
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#781532 - 09/07/12 05:02 AM
Re: Your favorite companion bird and why?
[Re: Diana - Birds Editor]
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Newbie
Registered: 05/16/11
Posts: 48
Loc: Divide, CO
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Oh, indeed! Birds, as I have been taught, engage in significant imitative behavior (as we humans do). Old Winston, Sr. had a beautiful set of songs he sang and his four sons picked up on that, and all of them sounded like the old man. They carried on when Winston died, and Winston, Jr., the last surviving son apparently taught the songs to the two other younger male finches here. They came in with fairly squawky incomplete songs, but picked up on the melodies of Winston, Jr.. Sort of like a young tenor studying under Luciano Pavarotti. Best wishes, Z. G. Standing Bear
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#781855 - 09/10/12 02:48 AM
Re: Your favorite companion bird and why?
[Re: Diana - Birds Editor]
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Newbie
Registered: 05/16/11
Posts: 48
Loc: Divide, CO
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Well, I'm an old man (71 years) and a disabled Vietnam combat veteran, yet I did devote 33 years to the Army (so I am not complaining). We (my wife and I) live at 9,000 feet elevation, halfway up Pikes Peak overlooking a small lake and so the wildlife is abundant, ducks, geese, hawks, eagles, exactly two blue herons, bears, two mountain lions, foxes, squirrels, chipmunks, rabbits, mule deer, elk, and a couple of pelicans (??). In fact, on our neighborhood web site at www.myspringvalley.org and can see a bear ambling across my front yard and a bald eagle perched on our flagpole. The climate is usually pleasant and dry - and we have almost no flying insects.
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