THEY JUST KEEP JUMPING ON THE COUNTER. AND CRAWLING UP HER LEG. THIS IS THE GREATEST PROBLEM YOU COULD EVER HAVE
This is both adorable and stressful to watch. Damn it, kittens, be good! Food’s coming!
OH MY GOD SHE NAMED ONE OF HER CATS OBAMA
I love that kittens are gently placed on the ground… whereas adult cats, because they should know better (and are undoubtedly better at landing on their feet) are just… flung.
Oh my god I love this
I love that the kittens continue climbing her even after she steps away from the food – the goal is no longer ‘get to food’ it is ‘climb the human’!
UNDER SEIGE!!
poor starving kitties, who have never been fed. Ever.
like seriously their brain-to-body size ratio is equal to that of a chimpanzee
They vocalize anger, sadness, or happiness in response to things
they are scary smart at solving puzzles
some crows stay with their mates until one of them dies
they can remember faces
SIDENOTE HERE BECAUSE HOLY SHIT. They did an experiment where these guys wore masks and some of them fucked with crows. Pretty soon the crows recognized the masks = douchebag. But the nice guys with masks they left alone. THEN, OH WE’RE NOT DONE, NO SIR crows that WEREN’T EVEN IN THE EXPERIMENT AND NEVER SAW THE MASK BEFORE knew about mask-dudes and attacked them on sight. THEY PASSED ON THE FUCKING INFORMATION TO THEIR CROW BUDDIES.
They remember places where crows were killed by farmers and change their migration patterns.
A colleague of my dad’s lives next to a lake, and looked out the window one morning to see a duck trapped in the ice. A crow swooped down. “Oh hell,” she thought, expecting carnage, because crows are opportunists. But the crow chipped at the ice with its beak until the duck was free.
Idk of this counts but a few crows saved me from a magpie swooping attack once ,they’re bros who can tell when magpies are being unreasonable and need to chill
I love crows so damn much. When I was fifteen, I hit a pretty serious bout of depression, to the point I was in my room for months. Well, a family of crows made a nest in a tree outside my window. There were two parents and two chicks. One chick was healthy and strong. One was weak, and had a caw like something being strained. It sounded more like a rooster crowing and so my parents jokingly named him ‘Buck’.Well… months passed and Buck’s sibling was taught to fly. His parents focused on the sibling because the sibling was strong. The father stayed behind to try and teach Buck, but I saw him try to fly, fail, and crash to the floor. His father helped him back up into the tree.
Every day, I would watch Buck from my window until one day I opened it and started talking to him. He was small and gangly and he couldn’t caw right. His feathers were all over the place and I felt a kinship. So I made a deal with him. I told him that if he could do it, if he could fly, then I could find the strength to get up. Well… near the end of the season, after talking with him every day, I finally saw him get out of the nest. He went to the edge of his branch, braced himself, and jumped… and just before he hit the ground, he soared back up into the sky. I cheered harder than I ever had before.
That winter, Buck left the area. I was crestfallen. I felt like I’d lost a friend. But I was so damn proud of him.
Cut to the next spring? I’m walking up the driveway one day when suddenly I hear a sound… a broken caw. I look up, and Buck is sitting in a tree above my head. He stared at me and puffed his feathers, then hopped down in front of me and cawed again. I was so damn thrilled, and I told him how proud I was of him. He ruffled his feathers and then soared off into his old tree.
That summer? I heard two broken caws. One from Buck… and one from his chick.
Cut to ten years later? We have a family of crows who all have a very distinct caw and they come here and spend every spring, summer, and fall on our property. Buck still greets me every spring.
that last reply made me wanna cry. that’s so beautiful.
this one morning i kept hearing really loud caws, i remember it was like 5am, LIKE REALLY LOUD AND ANNOYING AND AGGRESSIVE, so loud that i could hear it through a closed window, and i eventually went outside to check it out. there was a crow on my front lawn, it had an injury on its head and couldn’t fly and there were two other crows circling right above it, and they were cawing like mad.
i tried to get close and take a better look and one of them dived super low and tried to attack me. so i went back in the house and chopped some sliced raw meat and tossed it at him from a distance.
a few more times later, very soon after, they could tell i was trying to help, and did not attack me. i was “allowed” to walk up close and pick him up, he couldn’t drink water properly so i had to dip my finger in a bowl and stick it in his mouth.
i did this few times a day and it went on for about a week before he disappeared, i thought he recovered and left, but he came back the next day and lands on me, and i see him around the block quite often, and he would come sit on my shoulder for a few minutes and then fly away again. i feel like i’ve adopted a son.
Best birbs !!
your son is Beautiful and Strong
every time I see this post it has different crow stories and every time I reblog it again because all crow stories are good stories
Sick Tiger Cub Gets Rescued From Circus, Makes Incredible Recovery And Finds Love
SHES BLEPPING IN THE LAST PHOTO HELP ME
Since so many “tiger rescues” aren’t really rescues at all, I did some googling on this one.
Good news: This is a legit rescue, carried out by Tigers in America. This organisation rescues tigers from horrible situations like this.
If you’re an animal conservationist looking for an organisation to support, Tigers in America is worth looking into.
In-Sync Exotics – the place this cat lives – is a legitimate sanctuary, but this whole piece is actually just a rip-off of a Dodo “article”. The clickbait sentence above is the title and probably supposed to be an embedded link. I’m not a fan of the fact that this post doesn’t bother to name the facility currently housing her.
Aasha was brought to In-Sync with massive ringworm (what you see in the photos above) along with open wounds that were possibly bite marks. The In-Sync Exotics website doesn’t say where she came from – just that she was bouncing from situation to situation – but the Dodo article (which I am purposefully not linking to, because they are trash) says she was seized from a circus by the USDA. I can’t source that, and I generally mistrust the Dodo because they can’t fact-check their way out of an open door, but they did interview the sanctuary’s founder so it’s likely at least close to the truth.
“By the time Aasha came to In-Sync she was almost completely bald. We were told that she was believed to be about 7 months old and stunted in growth making her about the size of a bobcat. Weighing in at 37 pounds told us that she was around 4 months old. She wasn’t underweight but was covered all over with ringworm. Her tiny feet were swollen and red; the skin on her tummy was raw, red and cracking. For 4 weeks we had to give Aasha baths with medicated shampoo and dip her in a special dip. She also had to take two kinds of oral medications to help clear up and sooth her skin.Since Aasha has been here she is healing and becoming more like a tiger cub. She enjoys playing with her enrichment and has learned to play with the water from the hose. She hasn’t jumped in her tub yet but we know it is just a matter of time. All of us at In-Sync are looking forward to a long happy healthy life with Aasha and a lot of great laughs.“
As the photos above / Dodo “article” show, Aasha is now housed with another adult tiger – a male named Smuggler. Contrary to the messaging espoused by some of the big cat sanctuaries with a large internet presence, it is actually entirely okay and a fairly normal practice to co-house adult big cats… IF their personalities are compatible. Introductions are done slowly, starting at a distance, and they’re set up for success and to minimize any incidence of resource guarding or territorial issues. Some big cats – even tigers – really like having companionship. Some don’t. Both are fine and good.
In-Sync is not accredited by the Global Federation of Animal Sanctuaries, but after looking through their site and from what I’ve heard about them over the years, I’m not worried about that. It sounds like their tours are self-guided (you walk around on your own, like you would at a zoo), which is something GFAS standards prohibit. There are any number of reasons a small sanctuary would choose to prioritize having self-guided tours, but the most probable is that guided tours take a lot of extra staff and/or volunteer time and training. Most of their organization is volunteer-run, and if they’re going to focus on animal care instead of having docents shepherd people around, that’s a reasonable choice.
Tigers in America is not really a great metric to use for if a rescue or a facility is one to support, because they’re basically a membership organization for sanctuaries with tigers. Their founder is on the GFAS board, and honestly, given how he’s been talking since 2014 about how TIA facilities collectively have more tigers than AZA’s conservation breeding programs do… I’m not sure how much stock I put in them. They’re supposed to be a collection of the “best” big cat sanctuaries, but I can’t find the metric they’re using to determine that. They’ve got a lot of high-profile members, like Big Cat Rescue, and some really weird places, like The Wild Animal Sanctuary in Colorado – which has over 500 carnivores that they’ve imported from across the glove, has an very strict no-photos policy, won’t let you in the gate unless you give them a ton of personal information, and puts their employees and visiting professionals under incredibly tight non-disclosure agreements. There are other credible big cat sanctuaries, such as Tiger Haven in Tennessee (where the cats owned by Ringling went), that are not part of the TIA network. You’ve really gotta do your own research into each and every place you think you want to support.