Photos

Photos

February 14, 2011

A flying gem escaped and flew away but had decided to return back!

Around 10 in the morning, 1 partner of my african lovebird couple escaped from the cage and flew away. I unintentionally scared her away  by opening the cage' door and installing a swinging perch. Noticeably his partner which was left inside the cage got so disturbed that was very noisy; maybe he's calling her to come back or bring him together with her outside.

(I was a little bit mad of knowing 1 expensive bird had escaped. So I just said to myself, "Never mind, I will replaced the missing one and add more of these flying gems to alleviate my frustration.
But I could not also deny that what was so disappointing is knowing the fact that the bird was a female bird, which I expect to breed very soon- and it has been already 4 months since I take care of them.)
It was 5 in the afternoon when unexpectedly I noticed something atop the cage was moving, and the rest of the birds inside the cage were so noisy and were also moving around, they seemed to greet a visitor of their own kind. "The escapee is back!", this could be what they had been noisy of.
There were several attempts she did, searching for the entrance at the top of the cage when it was really at one side of the cage. It took her for about more than 30 minutes to get inside the entrapment door.
Thanks goodness, she decided to come back home. Probably she cannot bear to leave her partner in prison.
I hope all of my feathered friends will opt to come back if they happened to escape...
Below is the photo and video I took when she attempted to come back inside the cage.

This female african lovebird was unintentional scared away by me. She flew and had been out of my sight for more than six hours. Unexpectedly she decided to comeback home.
The snapshot below was the moment she was attempting to go back inside the cage.

Below is the video, the moment she was searching
for the entrance door.

Below is the entrapment door


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