For the holiday, a thread on how to befriend crows.

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Befriending crows is a wonderful thing.

I have many crow friends at home and at work. They bring joy at unexpected moments and can rescue a miserable day even without shaking down the dust of snow that Robert Frost described.

This thread is an updated version of one I posted at the bird site in July 2019.

#birding #birdwatching #birds #urbanbirding #crows #corvids #crow #corvid #crowfriends

If you live in an urban or suburban area where crows are around it's not too hard to befriend them. Rural crows are harder but not impossible.

First and foremost they like food. Peanuts in the shell are a favorite treat but most anything works; crows are omnivorous. It's probably not good for them, but they adore cheetos.

Photo: not a good shot but the only one I have of my beloved Tatterwing demonstrating next-level peanut technique: five at a time by spearing. No other crow figured this out.

If you feed them regularly, they will come to recognize you. They're remarkably good at recognizing faces, gaits, and even the sound of a particular car's engine.

In the rain wearing a new jacket with the hood up? They recognize me.

After a year away from the office due to COVID policies, I thought my office friends would have forgotten me. No. They spotted me within a few yards of the parking garage.

Try to be consistent. Make sure you have food for them each time you see them. Crows are so smart that this isn't essential. But it's a general principle in animal training which is, in a sense, what you are doing. Though as you'll discover, it's more like them training you.
Personally, I like to talk to them. I have no idea whether this helps or not. But I treat each one with dignity, greet them when I see them, explain what I'm doing as I'm getting out a treat, ask them how their days have been, that sort of thing.

@ct_bergstrom

As to "how much they understand," I feel pretty confident going with "more than you'd expect."

@cavyherd @ct_bergstrom Yeah, they definitely know when you are talking to them.

@richardvenusfo @ct_bergstrom

We have a lot of crows around here. If I had more energy, I'd strike up a relationship with them. I'd hate to commit to something I couldn't be sure of following through on, though.

@ct_bergstrom do they ever bring you presents? I remember reading a news story once about crows that befriended a girl and bright her shiny things.
@filtefish @ct_bergstrom Only that lost silver ring if I read the thread correctly.
@ct_bergstrom I love this thread & your suggestions. Once I added shelled peanuts to my bird feeders the crows began showing up. I love them!
@ct_bergstrom do then then steal your watch and wallet? 😏
@ct_bergstrom I talk to the birds, too. I've also learned that they fly away faster if I'm looking directly at them, so I have to talk to them while facing away from them. My neighbors probably think I'm insane. :)
@hedwyg @ct_bergstrom You look like a predator because you have two eyes together facing forward. I know you’re okay because I’ve always lived with humans, but I’m sure you make the birds outside nervous just because of your eyes. Hopefully they will learn not to be afraid of you. You sound like a very considerate human.

@SomangTheTiel @hedwyg @ct_bergstrom

Do you know whether birds react differently to people wearing an eyepatch?

@robryk @hedwyg @ct_bergstrom I’ve never seen an eyepatch, but I would imagine I would still be able to identify where the eye should be. After all, there still wouldn’t be even one eye on the side of the head (where eyes belong).

@hedwyg @ct_bergstrom we have many around here. I'm tempted to get a bag of shell peanuts to carry around now.

I say " hi" to them when I see them. One is usually claiming a tree as their territory with loud, possessive quorks. I wish them a good day as I pass

@pseudonym @hedwyg @ct_bergstrom I do the same thing! It seems over time they get used to me and tend to stay still and cock their heads in my direction and it looks as if they are pondering what I’m saying. I need to start feeding them again, though.
@ct_bergstrom we have both crows, red tailed and coopers hawks in our neighborhood. The crows frequently collaborate and chase the hawks. Since it’s not nesting season, sort of curious why they’re doing it as I don’t think the hawks are a threat to the crows? Everything if found via google just says, yeah they do this.

@Maleve @ct_bergstrom

Crows are territorial about their nesting area and have feeding areas separate from the nesting area that they are also protective of. But they don't seem as strict about the feeding areas. I've sometimes seen raptors in the feeding area being ignored by the crows.

@ct_bergstrom My wife has family who live on a boat on the Thames and they've adopted or been adopted by a couple of crows that they've named Edgar and Allen. While the husband assumes they're named after the poet Poe, the wife insists they're named after the Frog brothers from The Lost Boys.
@ct_bergstrom What would be good food to start with?
@princelysum @ct_bergstrom I've read that kibble is good too -- we have a household member who is allergic to peanuts so we don't keep them around, but I've been spreading puppy kibble out for them and they seem to love it.
@solcita @princelysum @ct_bergstrom I put out kibble for a feral cat on my front porch. Some of the crows that come around for peanuts also steal kibble from the bowl. I never chase these crows away, but they act embarrassed when they know I see them at the bowl.
@ct_bergstrom my long-term goal is to buy a house in Seattle and become the neighborhood hedge witch so I can have a bunch of corvid companions
@aleen @ct_bergstrom this sounds like a bop. I’m in. But only if I can find a pair of them I can call Truman and Capote.
@ct_bergstrom Carl, I hope you know you're an honorary Adelaide Crows Football Club member and next time you come to Australia, I am taking you to a game.

@dctrjack OMG when I was 12 years old and living in Melbourne for a year I barracked for Adelaide for exactly that reason.

I'm going to take you up on this so look out!

Full disclosure I was also fond of Collingwood for similar reasons.

@ct_bergstrom Until you edit that toot to say Collingwood are the most disgusting, vile team to walk the Earth, my offer is on hold.

(No, really, you tell me and we're there!)

@ct_bergstrom I recall on the UW campus itself watching a pair of crows intimidate a squirrel into giving up a Cheeto it had found. Unclear whether the crows shared the treat afterward or one of them got to eat it all.

@welltemperedwriter @ct_bergstrom

I've seen a crow do the same thing with a cat, trying to intimidate it to abandon a kill. Cat was VERY vocal about the whole thing, and crow was VERY close. They were acting like peer-predators, very odd. No other aggression between them, just meowing and chattering and crowding.

@hatchetation @ct_bergstrom My cats definitely eye the crows who hang around our house (one mated pair has nested nearby for years) with an "I can take 'em" kind of vibe. I'm a little skeptical of that tbh (they don't go outside).
@ct_bergstrom Hot Cheetos?
@bartbing @ct_bergstrom Fascinatingly, birds aren't susceptible to the trickery of capsaicin! It probably evolved to ensure wider dispersal of wild type pepper seeds, since birds will generally take seeds further than small mammals.
@ZaneSelvans @bartbing Exactly. Thank you for explaining this. My former colleague Josh Tewksbury did wonderful work on this story.
@ct_bergstrom @ZaneSelvans Thanks a lot, now I have to Google capsaicin.
@bartbing Some birdseed is flavored with hot pepper to deter squirrels—doesn't bother birds.
@ZaneSelvans @bartbing @ct_bergstrom Pretty neat - seems like a single residue change is enough to prevent capsaicin binding in avian TRPV1! https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-64584-2
A single TRPV1 amino acid controls species sensitivity to capsaicin - Scientific Reports

Chili peppers produce capsaicin (a vanilloid) that activates the transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily V member 1 (TRPV1) on sensory neurons to alter their membrane potential and induce pain. To identify residues responsible for differential TRPV1 capsaicin sensitivity among species, we used intracellular Ca2+ imaging to characterize chimeras composed of capsaicin-sensitive rat TRPV1 (rTRPV1) and capsaicin-insensitive chicken TRPV1 (cTRPV1) exposed to a series of capsaicinoids. We found that chimeras containing rat E570-V686 swapped into chicken receptors displayed capsaicin sensitivity, and that simply changing the alanine at position 578 in the S4-S5 helix of the chicken receptor to a glutamic acid was sufficient to endow it with capsaicin sensitivity in the micromolar range. Moreover, introduction of lysine, glutamine or proline at residue A578 also elicited capsaicin sensitivity in cTRPV1. Similarly, replacing corresponding rTRPV1 residue E570 with lysine or glutamine retained capsaicin sensitivity. The hydrophilic capsaicin analog Cap-EA activated a cTRPV1-A578E mutant, suggesting that A578 may participate in vanilloid binding. The hydrophilic vanilloid agonist zingerone did not activate any A578 mutants with capsaicin sensitivity, suggesting that the vanilloid group alone is not sufficient for receptor activation. Our study demonstrates that a subtle modification of TRPV1 in different species globally alters capsaicin responses.

Nature
@ZaneSelvans @bartbing @ct_bergstrom Birds don’t really taste spicy/hot. I have an African Grey Parrot and one of her favorite snacks are dried Chinese red peppers.
@ct_bergstrom How did you figure out Tatterwing’s pronouns? Are crows sexually dimorphic?

@noelleletoile GREAT question.

They're not. But only the females make a particular call known as a rattle-knock, as best as we know. That tipped me off re: Tatterwing.

American Crow Rattle Vocalization

YouTube
@noelleletoile @ct_bergstrom That is so cool. I’ve never heard them make that sound. Thank you for sharing this.
@noelleletoile @ct_bergstrom
Thank you for posting the video--I've had crows nesting in the back yard for a few years, and heard that sound several times, beginning 3 springs ago--at first it sounded more mechanical than animal, but I deduced it must be the crows...this confirms it.
@noelleletoile @ct_bergstrom that's interesting - in the UK it's the magpies that make that noise, I don't think I've ever heard a crow make it. Now I'm curious if it's only the female magpies as well! 
@noelleletoile @ct_bergstrom haha they sound different in CA than NY
@ct_bergstrom I expect you mean unsalted, unroasted peanuts-in-the-shell, yes?
@SohanDsouza @ct_bergstrom Crow friend here. Yes, they like them in the shell. They also like the unsalted shelled peanuts from Trader Joe's. Whatever nuts you feed, make sure they are unsalted.
@sarahc @SohanDsouza @ct_bergstrom we have crows that visit our rooftop. They are all named Maurice. They do indeed like peanuts with shells. So much they sometimes have gang battles to see who controls our rooftop deck.
@ct_bergstrom the chewy milkbones are a crowd favourite for our fish crows. They dip them in puddles and then tear off pieces, then come back for more. A little goes a long way (generally break into 1/3rd to 1/2 per crow) and they're pretty nutritious!
@ct_bergstrom I saw (and heard) a group of about 5 the other day and I went running outside with an offering of nuts and dried fruit. Idk if they ate it or the squirrels did, but I'll keep trying to befriend the crows