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It is inconceivable that an earthbound creature can know how to teach baby wild birds to fly. When I found a fledgling bird on the ground by the roadside, that is exactly what I did.
If you asked me how do baby wild birds learn to fly, or how long does it take a baby bird to to fly, I would have had no idea. But a chance encounter with a stranded fledgeling Common Myna following a storm, meant I had to learn fast to save the bird’s life.
Helping Injured or Sick Birds
I’ve Rescued Many a Wild Bird
I am not an ornithologist, but I’ve rescued so many birds since I was a teenager, I have almost lost count.
I started with two jackdaws which were a lot of fun and became good pets. When I let them fly free they stayed quite a long time until they eventually flew off.
There were pigeons, sparrows, a common myna, a penguin and a cormorant, that I can remember.
Sea Birds in Cape Town
The penguin was the biggest problem. I found him on a West Coast beach walk in Cape Town and had to carry him two kilometres back to my car. Not only are penguins heavy, but this one pecked at me all the way. If I hadn’t been such an amiable sort, I would have left him behind to snuff it. Anyway, I managed to get him to SANCOB bird hospital, after he did a number on the upholstery, where he was diagnosed with malaria and thankfully not leprosy. I visited him a few times, not sure whether to take grapes or flowers. The vet suggested fish would be best. Anyway he made a full recovery.
I also found the cormorant on his last legs, sitting in a trance on the rocks at Blaauberg in Cape Town. He was heavy but put up less of a fight. SANCOB did their best but he had malaria too and unfortunately didn’t last long.
Birds in a Storm
In our need to protect ourselves from the damage storms during the monsoon can inflict, it is easy to overlook the plight of helpless wildlife that lives with us in our daily lives. Trees provide refuge and homes for many creatures, and like our own homes, they are subjected to the ravages of wind and rain which can tear them limb from limb. This is, of course, all a part of the natural world and unless you accidentally come across a stranded fledgling bird on the roadside, as I did, you may not be aware of how much wildlife can be lost in a big storm.
Can humans learn how to teach a baby bird to fly? It may be an odd question. But when I found the fledgling by the road, that is exactly what I did. I rescued a baby Common Myna after a storm. Fed her until she was strong enough. Then helped her until she could fly and take care of herself.
When I Found a Fledgling on the Ground in Need of Help
I walked through the adjoining villages after a stormy night, avoiding fallen branches as I followed the river bank path. Then I nearly trod on a helpless baby bird which looked to all the world like a leaf on the roadside. I assumed she must have been blown out of her nest and she may have had brothers and sisters, for all I knew.
There was no sign of other birds and she lay motionless. I thought she was dead, but when I picked her up there were signs of life. I cradled her in my hand, carried her home and made a little nest in the house.
She lay there quietly for several hours, appearing to be uninjured, just exhausted and weak. I prepared a ‘cordon bleu’ meal of overripe banana and water which I administered drop by drop via a syringe.
How Long Does it take Baby Wild Birds to Fly?
Birds fly as effortlessly as fish swim and mammals walk. But when they hatch, how do baby birds learn to fly. I was about to find out that, like walking, flying involves trial and error, crash landings and practice. Learning how to take off, land and use the wind takes time, but soon becomes natural.
So, a fledgling bird by the roadside, as this one was, may be a baby bird beginning its life on earth. I didn’t know where baby birds go when they leave the nest. And if I hadn’t been ignorant of how the bird world works, I may have thought it did not need to be rescued.
Fledgling birds can appear to be injured or sick. They may have jumped or been pushed by parents from the nest, which is normal for many species. So, how long does it take for birds to fly?
Since the rescue I learned it can take up to three weeks, and the parents may feed the fledgling on the ground, every ten minutes or so in the process. In which case it is not necessary to interfere with nature, even though the fledgling is an obvious target for predators, such as rats, snakes, and domestic animals.
But it was after a storm and common-sense told me otherwise, and in my ignorance I may have saved her life. I had to learn how to teach a bird to fly, or at least try.
A Successful Recovery
She recovered slowly and by the second day she was eating well, chuntering away and quite lively. It didn’t take long to think of a name for her. Myn seemed appropriate, so Myn it was.
I didn’t know how to teach a bird to eat, so I added some freshly cooked sweetcorn to Myn’s diet which went down very well but was quickly regurgitated. So that was taken off the menu and replaced by rice and sweet mango, which stayed down successfully.
Feeding time was a frantic affair and an almost continual process for many days as she grew quickly. A bird’s food processing system is so quick it seems to go in one end and out the other without stopping on the way. A slight exaggeration maybe, but not far from the truth.
Within a couple of days, I learned a new language – Bird. She let me know that she wanted to have a go at climbing trees and hopping around the garden. I worked it out fairly quickly. I would have taken the incessant squawking for hunger if I hadn’t just fed her. Abortive attempts at flying culminated in many crash landings. Impatience and a youthful desire for independence overwhelmed her.
She had recovered fully.
Learning to Fly
Back to the question. How do baby birds learn to fly? I never expected to have to teach a bird to fly so I had to find out. I Googled away and found out it takes between twenty and thirty days from hatching before Mynas can fly and become independent.
So it wasn’t long before I enrolled Myn in my beginner’s course for trainee pilots. On her makeshift perch above the grass runway, the budding aeronautical genius prepared for her first take-off.
How to Teach a Baby Wild Bird to Fly – Airborne at last
Myn’s lungs nearly burst with screeching, as she revved her engine up to full throttle. All was set. With wings flapping manically and all the controls checked, she took off. In her haste and my cry of ‘chocks away.’ But I didn’t tell her when to release her grip on the perch. She left it too late and nosedived into the runway. She wasn’t amused when I laughed. This was serious business. Myn crash-landed several times before she got the hang of it. When she worked out how and when to let go of the perch things moved along much faster.
Despite several amusing episodes, I could only admire her tenacity and persistence. I never resorted to laughter again. Even at such a young age, she was far more accomplished than any human could ever be. I had found the answer to the question, how do baby birds learn to fly? They practice like baby humans learning to walk.
I like to think I had taught a baby bird to fly. But in reality, I couldn’t teach a bird to fly, but I could protect her while she taught herself. Just like my mother protected me when I learned to walk.
Myn was soon an accomplished aviator and free as a bird (sometimes she imagined she was human) she came and went as she pleased. Mynas are scavengers and my food must have tasted better than hers, as she often stole it from under my nose.
Back to Nature
Myn went back to nature as soon as she was ready. Myna’s mate for life, so I hope she found a good husband and she’s taking care of him and her babies.
I’ll never forget her. I just hope she gives me a thought from time to time.
This is How the Parents Teach a Baby Wild Bird to Fly
Final Thoughts
Most close encounters humans have with other living creatures, affect us in some way. My time with Myn had a greater effect than most, and it moved me to weave it into the final novel of my first fiction series, Alfie Goes to Thailand. The novel is called A Million Roman Candles and the series is a story of human challenge, manipulation, rejection, abuse, and a search for peace.
If you like thought-provoking drama, romantic tragedies, and damaged characters, then you’ll love the tropical sauna and wry humour of POST- IT NOTES and the other books in this Psychological Thriller series. Starved of love and affection for far too long, it came at Alfie from all sides. When you are led to the well after a long drought, the temptation to drink it dry is powerful.
Alfie’s adventures hot up, as a conniving Mother and her wicked daughters, plot his downfall. The dangers are exacerbated by crooked builders, and rogue property traders, exposing him to a hair-raising ride through Thailand. There are shades of David Copperfield just when he thinks he’s landed safely…
Read about Alfie Goes to Thailand and get the books at Amazon.
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Sad but it happens, Wendi. All life is precious but fragile. And in the wild, there are no paramedics or hospitals. So, the survival rate is much lower. I know how it feels but it is reality.
Thanks for your response! The blue Jay was acting as usual yesterday morning, practicing his short little flys. Parents very attentive as they had always been. I noticed around 3 pm in the extreme heat of the day he left the cover of the lower bushes and went into the open grass but was still shaded. He was mostly still up until dark. He moved just a bit, mostly asleep and part of the time sitting in the grass with his head stretched high. Closer to evening his head laid out and body seemed flat not propped up. Parents barely came. Usually around 6:30 pm he would start practicing his flying again and they would be feeding him. They would come by this time but look at him from above the fence and not drop down to him? There had been a hawk they chased off in a nearby tree so I thought they were scared to indicate where he was in case the hawk was watching. Anyway, they never fed him and he never moved much but did cry out to them.
At dark I took him in, in the box. I noticed he was leaning on his side a bit and not able to hold his head up long. His breathing seemed labored. I got very concerned and texted the wild life rehab and he said bring him at 6am. Well he stopped breathing at around midnight. I’m so heart broken, I watched this baby for 9 days all day. I know sounds crazy and I didn’t think it’d be that many days. Thought he’d fly within 5 based on the Internet. It’s so strange how in one day within a few hours he went from being lively to lethargic and passed. I’m not sure what to do with him. I’m sure the parents will be searching for him this morning. This was my first bird experience and loved watching and learned so much from them, however the sadness of him dying makes me reconsider ever getting involved again. I’m certain he wouldn’t have made it that long though if I didn’t bring him in at night due to predators. Does anyone have an idea of what might have happened to him? How can he go down hill so fast?
Hi, Wendi. Lovely story and it seems like you are doing a great job. Unless you sit there day and night with a shot-gun, you can’t cover every eventuality!! Don’t worry. Once it gets airborne, there may be a few crashes, but it will soon be away. If it is strong enough to reach the high branches, I doubt it will fall. Keep well. James
Hi James love this story! I currently am outside sweating in the Texas heat watching over a blue Jay fledgling as it tries to fly. Found it 8 days ago. Fell from nest 20’ up! Parents are amazing and feed it all day and run off other birds and squirrels. This is my eighth day outside almost all day, I take some breaks to get stuff done but am so worried something will get it when I’m not looking. It’s in the corner of my fence under nandina trees and Crêpe myrtles. At night right before dark I place it in a deep box and bring it inside and put the box on in a heating pad (we have predators, the hawks freak me out as they fly by) we also have cats around and possums. I bring it back out before sun rises and parents are there right waiting to feed. It’s trying to fly, it went from hopping to 3 feet of flight distances but can’t get up too high. I placed some branches as perches it uses to take off from, but it’s jumping towards the fence and hitting the fence rather that out into the open grass. Bad and good because the hawks will see it if it flies into the open grass but not sure it will learn, flying into the fence. I hope it flies soon because my life is on hold for this baby and I can’t bare to leave it. I did take it to a wild life rehab to look it over last week and he said it was just fine and to continue letting the parents take care and bring in at night from predators. Any ideas what it looks like when they will soon be able to fly off up to the higher tree branches and not fall? If it flies to the top of my fence and falls off behind me they have dogs! I hope it can fly up and out if that happens or I’ll be devastated! Also, I put up a cross cross pattern of orange baler twine from fence to trees to deter hawks. I saw someone on line so this to keep hawks from chickens.
Go to the link in the post or https://jamoroki.com/how-to-teach-a-baby-bird-to-eat-on-its-own/
Thank you for doing this. I have looked for stuff like this for a while and yours is what is helping me the most. My friend rescued a house finch fledging when he saw a car run over another fledgling and missing the other little fledgling. So he took it home and he is doing the best he can to take care of this amazing little creature. He will feed her when the birdy cries of hunger he cleans and takes care of the bird like it would be a baby. But what I’m concerned about is this little fledgling learning to fly. My friend doesn’t have a yard to help the bird practice flight so he will practice in his bedroom with his finger as the branch. I just get too emotional because I want the little bird to succeed. But I feel that my friend is out of options when it comes to training it to fly. I don’t think he knows how but he is trying. He feeds him, made a nest for him but he wants it to grow strong and fly to find a mate. How to help this little fledgling learn to eat on its own and fly. We r nervous foster parents well he is confident that the birdy will learn on his own even without practice. I’m not sure. But my friend Ute does love this tiny creature and does things I never thought he would do, get up early to clean and feed him, play with him, take him with him wherever he goes, feed and clean all over again and it repeats with no complaints. I’m so proud of both because the birdy is thriving and loves his company and loves to eat and run and just cuddle on his hand or lap. But I want him to learn to eat on his own and learn to fly. How can we do that?
Hi, Mariana. The only advice I can give is let him keep crashing until he works it out. Stay with him until he is competent and make sure the cats keep their distance. It won’t take long. james
I have a black bird…and he’s ready to fly…but doesn’t know how….any advice. Got lots of cats on the property and this little guy crashes with style.
So pleased to be of help. And good luck with your new friend. I can assure you it will be hard to let her go when she is ready.
I’ve just rescued a fledgling woodpecker. After trawling the internet for help with flying lessons, your experience with is the only one that will help. Thank you so much.
Thank you so much, Lynda. You are very kind.
We need more compassionate people like yourself, if we did this world would perhaps have a chance at being a wonderful place to be again… I too have helped/rescued everything that needed help or I could help, I am even involved in Cat/Dog rescuing & rehoming.
So I tip my hat to you and say a HUGE Thank-You 🐾❣️
Lynda 🤗
Thank you Mary. I’m glad you enjoyed it
Wow! I love the story and the pictures of Myn and your wise perceptions.
It takes between twenty and thirty days from hatching before Mynas can fly and become independent. So. keep feeding it 2 or 3 times a day, like you see me doing in the photo. And keep it in a cage to stop the cats getting it. Then wait. If her leg isn’t bad, she’ll soon start trying to fly.
I have found a myna 3 days back. It can’t feed itself and can’t fly and also slightly injured in leg. How many days required to fly for mynah?
Thanks Golde. Seems like I’m the bird man but not from Alcatraz!!! I’m fine, if a little knackered with ageing. Hope you are well too? James
Bless your heart for being so kind…..not everyone would have taken this on……hoping all is well there..
If I told you the number of birds I’ve rescued since I was 10 years old you wouldn’t believe me. Jackdaws, pigeons, sparrows; even a cormorant with malaria and a bloody penguin who weighed a ton. A few of the other variety rescued me as well!!!! Keep well B.
Fantastic story and pictures JK…