An enthusiastic backyard bird watcher named Stuart Dahlquist spent years leaving out food for a family of crows—but he never expected to be given anything in return for the snacks.
That’s why he was all the more shocked when he was surprised with a gift from the corvids.
The 56-year-old Seattle homeowner first became acquainted with the bird family after he rescued two chicks that had fallen out of their nest in his front yard six years ago.
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Dahlquist told The Dodo that he had always delighted in listening to the baby birds chirp to their parents during feeding time—so when he went outside and found the tiny crows on the ground, he knew he had to help.
Despite the squawks of alarm from the adults, Dahlquist managed to scoop up the chicks and put them back in the nest. He even left out food and water at the base of the tree in case they fell a second time.
He then began regularly throwing bird food into his front yard—and the crows apparently took notice.
We've been feeding a small family of four crows (mated pair and their two year old kids) for several years. Last week two days in a row they left these gifts, pull tabs threaded onto pine twigs. This isn't only generous, it's creative, it's art.
— Stuart Dahlquist (@StuartDahlquist) March 24, 2019
My mind is blown. pic.twitter.com/tT5ORZ3AHL
One day when Dahlquist was preparing for his daily feeding ritual, he was surprised to find a fir sprig that had been decorated with a soda can tab. Not only that, it was left in the exact spot where he fed the crows.
“I noticed it straight away because I’m kind of sensitive about trash going where it belongs,” he told The Dodo, “but the pull tab being threaded onto the sprig of fir wasn’t normal and I hung onto it.”
The next day, he was offered a second soda tab-decorated branch courtesy of the crows—and he says was stunned by the discovery.
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“This isn’t only generous, it’s creative, it’s art,” Dahlquist wrote on social media. “My mind is blown.”
Since his Twitter photo of the greenery gifts were shared several thousand times, Jennifer Campbell-Smith, a behavioral ecologist who earned her PhD studying crows at Binghamton University, told the Audubon Society: “I am very skeptical of random internet sources, but knowing these birds and how intelligent they are, I wouldn’t be shocked.
“It’s still an amazing example of the way crows are really watching us and are mindful of us,” she added.
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Regardless of the corvids’ intent, Dahlquist says he has maintained a close relationship with the bird family since the incident. Additionally, he told Audubon that he planned on getting a tattoo of the gift as reminder of his sweet inter-species friendship.
“They’ll follow along when I take my walks, landing on the wires along the way,” Dahlquist told The Dodo. “The adult male … is very amiable and will fly sometimes within a few feet, swooping by to say, ‘Here I am!’”
(If you want to learn more about the cleverness of crows, be sure and watch the jaw-dropping TEDx Talk below)
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Crows are extremely intelligent. They recognize faces and not only hold grudges against those that are mean to them but also reward those that are kind to them with gifts. There is a girl in the UK that has been gifted wit buttons, coins and other little items the crows have found. It’s intentionally as they leave them in the same spot and she’s seen them do it.
I do believe the crows created these gifts for Mr. Dahlquist and that they are art, on a crow level.
I have learned to stop looking at crows negatively, through reading about how intelligent they are.
How many “ugly animals” are kind and intelligent and not often considered.
Crows and ravens have been known throughout history to leave gifts for those who endear them. This is one of the reasons that they are often seen as “familiars” for magickal folks because they give and receive care and appreciation.
When I was a teenager, someone brought my dad, an animal lover like myself, a found baby crow. My dad hand fed it and raised it in his garage. When it was old enough, he released it. It stayed nearby their home and it would fly and land near my dad when he whistled for it. My parents couldn’t get yard work done as it would dive bomb them in play. It stayed close by for months until they left for an extended vacation and it was gone when they returned home.
thank you for sharing, sad that it did not come back
A little kindness can go a very long way!!!
Great article, very heartwarming, and helpful to realized that animals, birds, are feeling caring and thinking beings.
A charming incident that demonstrates the intelligence of these birds. If a budge can learn to talk, why shouldn’t a crow leave gifts?