Weirdly, you would assume that they'd be discreet when they're in someone else's territory, but no, they were super loud for some reason (or are they trying to claim it this way?). And very soon, Mr and Ms Crow showed up and Mr Crow slammed into one of the South Crows again. It's always very impressive (it went too fast, I couldn't film or anything).
I didn't keep track of what happened after (the South Crows fled, though), but later in the afternoon I went to the park. ⤵️
I was a bit worried about Mr Crow, as this is how I think he usually he injures himself, but both Mr and Ms Crow were fine. First I gave them a peanut the way I always do, then, in order to try to tame them a little more, I tried something new. I left several peanuts (not just one or two) on a bench, and I left them on the side that was closest to me. And... I filmed!
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/AnrVI28e2bI
As you see, Mr Crow didn't dare to grab them. They were just too close. ⤵️

@pandabutter I don't know the details, but research has been done on carrion crows and they can tell when a human speaks a different language than the one they're used to hear.
With that being said, they got curious about me at first because I was actually speaking to them whereas 99% of humans around them simply ignores them. And for the befriending part, there is only one method: food. 😉
Crows are curious but also very neophobe. Any unknown thing is deemed "unsafe until proven otherwise."