scraps-is-busy:
“ nova-quill:
“ rp-gardnerthemercenary:
“ nova-quill:
“ What is this!? I took it from someone’s dogs
”
this is called a birb, he is small and chirps and be’s cute, but on this inside, it is judging you very hard
”
I know it was...

scraps-is-busy:

nova-quill:

rp-gardnerthemercenary:

nova-quill:

What is this!? I took it from someone’s dogs

this is called a birb, he is small and chirps and be’s cute, but on this inside, it is judging you very hard

I know it was judging! It pooped on me x.x lol

Also guys please don’t further spread the ‘its parents will abandon it because it smells like human’s it’s a lie and has cost a lot of animals their life because ppl won’t leave the babies back where they should be…

Throwing it out there, but I’ve met some terrible people in the past who justify smashing wild bird eggs or killing baby birds under the “They’ll die anyway because they smell like humans” myth.

  1. tyrannoshirt-moved reblogged this from silver-tongues-blog
  2. askponycocoa-blog reblogged this from scraps-is-busy and added:
    Yeah, birds can’t smell anything. The only reason a bird wouldn’t come back would be if it was dead or was chased away...
  3. baby-dragon-maybe reblogged this from silver-tongues-blog
  4. silver-tongues-blog reblogged this from scraps-is-busy
  5. zenaquaria said: Is a Starling~ Snopes.com also backs you on the myth of “parent birds will reject baby if humans touch it”. Birds have an atrocious sense of smell compared to dogs or cats. They’re on par with us humans on that front.
  6. aerialaim said: It’s not, Wildlife Aid says not to specifically with fledglings and it is the season for them so it might be one since it’s not really flying yet and just flopping about.
  7. aerialaim said: You could use the backyard bird identifier on National Geographic’s website to find out. If its wings are okay and it’s not bleeding, I’d return it outside asap cause if it smells like humans, other birds might avoid it.