Releasing rescued pigeon?

SniperGoose

Crowing
5 Years
Apr 15, 2018
309
1,156
287
Central PA
A few weeks ago, I went into our barn to get some straw for my geese. I noticed something moving on the floor of the barn - a very young pigeon. Way too young to be out of its nest. As we have stray cats in the area, I didn't want to leave it there to die. The nests were all very high up in the barn and I had no way of returning the baby. I took it out of the barn and looked it over to see if it had any noticeable injuries. Thankfully there were none! It could walk around just fine, but was weeks away from being able to fly. Still had a lot of baby fuzz on it too. Oddly enough, it seemed happy that I found it. So I took it upon myself to finish raising it in hopes of releasing it when it was old enough.

*I'll be referring to it as a "he" just for the sake of simplicity from here on out lol
I've been keeping the lil fella in a spare parrot cage in my kitchen. I've already got him eating and drinking on his own. I've taken him outside multiple times already, and he does fly, but prefers to just stay near me and walk around wherever I am.

We have lots of other wild pigeons in the area. I live on a 550 acre farm, and so it's a nice place for pigeons. I've kept pigeons before and re-released them. My dad once used to shoot them with a pellet gun and I would go find them after he went to work, put them in a cage, and take care of them until they were healed. (luckily my dad loves this pigeon, so hopefully this stops him from shooting them from now on) Those pigeons already knew how to survive in the wild though. I'm afraid mine will struggle. I know pigeons are social though, and maybe he would learn from them? Or at least that's what I would hope.

So will he be ok out there on his own? I honestly don't even know if he'll want to leave. I never ever once intended to keep him as a pet. I do love him, but I simply wanted to save him and release after he was ready to go. Any tips on making the release easier on him? I want to give him the best chance of survival possible.
 
A few weeks ago, I went into our barn to get some straw for my geese. I noticed something moving on the floor of the barn - a very young pigeon. Way too young to be out of its nest. As we have stray cats in the area, I didn't want to leave it there to die. The nests were all very high up in the barn and I had no way of returning the baby. I took it out of the barn and looked it over to see if it had any noticeable injuries. Thankfully there were none! It could walk around just fine, but was weeks away from being able to fly. Still had a lot of baby fuzz on it too. Oddly enough, it seemed happy that I found it. So I took it upon myself to finish raising it in hopes of releasing it when it was old enough.

*I'll be referring to it as a "he" just for the sake of simplicity from here on out lol
I've been keeping the lil fella in a spare parrot cage in my kitchen. I've already got him eating and drinking on his own. I've taken him outside multiple times already, and he does fly, but prefers to just stay near me and walk around wherever I am.

We have lots of other wild pigeons in the area. I live on a 550 acre farm, and so it's a nice place for pigeons. I've kept pigeons before and re-released them. My dad once used to shoot them with a pellet gun and I would go find them after he went to work, put them in a cage, and take care of them until they were healed. (luckily my dad loves this pigeon, so hopefully this stops him from shooting them from now on) Those pigeons already knew how to survive in the wild though. I'm afraid mine will struggle. I know pigeons are social though, and maybe he would learn from them? Or at least that's what I would hope.

So will he be ok out there on his own? I honestly don't even know if he'll want to leave. I never ever once intended to keep him as a pet. I do love him, but I simply wanted to save him and release after he was ready to go. Any tips on making the release easier on him? I want to give him the best chance of survival possible.

:clap:clap:clap:clap Awesome job Snipergoose!!! How old would you say he is now? You said you found him a few weeks ago so I'm guessing he is less than two months old, not quite old enough to be on his own without a flock to guide him. Even after he can fly better he will still be maturing mentally. Ideally he will notice the wild flock at some point and will be naturally motivated to join them by a strong drive to find a mate and pair up. It sounds like you live in a great location for this to happen. In the meantime I'd suggest a soft release. By this I mean - Provide him a safe shelter where you give him food and water and let him explore on his own. For now he is bonded to you and will probably stay nearby. Even if he joins the wild flock he may still visit you.:)
edit added - And yes, if he joins the wild flock he will definitely learn survival skills from them. Pigeons are great at observational learning.
 
:clap:clap:clap:clap Awesome job Snipergoose!!! How old would you say he is now? You said you found him a few weeks ago so I'm guessing he is less than two months old, not quite old enough to be on his own without a flock to guide him. Even after he can fly better he will still be maturing mentally. Ideally he will notice the wild flock at some point and will be naturally motivated to join them by a strong drive to find a mate and pair up. It sounds like you live in a great location for this to happen. In the meantime I'd suggest a soft release. By this I mean - Provide him a safe shelter where you give him food and water and let him explore on his own. For now he is bonded to you and will probably stay nearby. Even if he joins the wild flock he may still visit you.:)
edit added - And yes, if he joins the wild flock he will definitely learn survival skills from them. Pigeons are great at observational learning.

Thank you! Yes he's most definitely less than 2 months old. I've had him around a month now I believe. He can fly pretty good now, but I agree that he'll still be mentally maturing. I'll start taking him down near where the other pigeons are so he can get more familiar with the area, and hopefully he'll be ok to be out there on his own soon enough! I'd love if he would still visit me for sure. I've grown quite attached to the little fella :)

Here's a pic of him the first day I got him, and a pic I took today when I got home from work (I love his little face in the second one :lol:) :

baby.jpg


now.jpg
 
Thank you! Yes he's most definitely less than 2 months old. I've had him around a month now I believe. He can fly pretty good now, but I agree that he'll still be mentally maturing. I'll start taking him down near where the other pigeons are so he can get more familiar with the area, and hopefully he'll be ok to be out there on his own soon enough! I'd love if he would still visit me for sure. I've grown quite attached to the little fella :)

Here's a pic of him the first day I got him, and a pic I took today when I got home from work (I love his little face in the second one :lol:) :

View attachment 1803977

View attachment 1803978
I love the photos! Looks to be a real sweetie in both.:love And yeah, too young to let go yet. Are there some pigeons nesting in your barn where you found him? They could be his original flock. Maybe he could meet them.
 
I love the photos! Looks to be a real sweetie in both.:love And yeah, too young to let go yet. Are there some pigeons nesting in your barn where you found him? They could be his original flock. Maybe he could meet them.

He really is! :) Yeah there are. There's usually wild ones sitting on top of our barn, and on the rafters inside the barn. Luckily I don't have to work this weekend, so I'll have plenty of time to spend with him outside!
 
UPDATE
I'm thinking he is definitely a he now. He's started to get a little sassy with my hand in his cage sometimes, though I'm working on fixing that issue. But either way it doesn't really hurt lol.
After taking him out nearly every day (weather permitting), I haven't really made any progress in terms of releasing him back into the wild. He'll fly around a bit, but he always comes back to me and lands on my shoulder (or my head :rolleyes:). He isn't even afraid of our cats either, which makes me think he'd be a snack real quick on his own. I was reading on some other forums and from what I read on there, it's really hard to release a tamed bird back into the wild once it's been domesticated since they'll not have any survival instincts...So I'm afraid I may have to end up keeping him. That isn't an issue at all, but it's sad because I had never intended to keep him as a pet, and just wanted to help the little fella out a bit.

I'm still going to continue to bring him outside in hopes of releasing him, but I'm starting to doubt that he'll ever be able to survive on his own :hmm
 

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