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- #11
agingerbrunette
Chirping
Hiding the food sounds great and simple. The no talking part sheesh I may explode not reacting to the butt wiggle. I will def try to set him/her up for success. Not sure how successful I will be in the middle of suburbia but we shall give it a go.Congrats you’re now a rehabber
when I did wildlife rehab, our basic principals were to mimic their natural habits as much as possible (hiding food, cutting browse rather than putting food in dishes etc), and to limit human interaction. We weren’t allowed to talk to the animals, they had screens up so they didn’t see us moving about, and they couldn’t associate us with food.
with babies, it was more relaxed except the human interaction part. Baby birds were tube fed silently and then placed back in their enclosures. Ducks were in a pen with water available for dunking. When they were big enough, they had swimming water available at all times for building strength (though we also had cameras on those pens).
basically your goals are to make sure it knows what it needs to survive, and doesn’t associate humans with easy meals, dogs with companionship etc. does that make sense?