Added: 3 years ago
From: Rocketboy1950
Views: 6,764
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  • The sound track of Australia is the magpies' song!

  • Adorable!!

  • miss the maggies!

  • your magpie is beautiful

  • That just sounds like one of the millions of Maggies in Australia

  • @whipthedog Good on ya, give away the secret

  • it's a bit ratty looking, no?

  • @vontrappster That's because it is a juvenile...it's still got 'baby' feathers, which it is molting out. And see the beak is still black?? ...adult Magpies have white beaks, and beautiful glossy white feathers on their backs.

    I have a 16yo BLIND female Magpie called 'Stevie' and this is exactly what she used to look and sond like...thanks for sharing!

  • @donnaham369 can i ask how did she get blind?

  • @zperuna she had very bad lice and scratched at her eyes...(one was popped, the other very badly scratched), awful eh? (this was before we found her fallen out of the nest).

  • @donnaham369 ouch :/ i'm glad that you're taking care of her

  • brilliant fun I tend to play it at birthdays with my brother he is really good at it. I actually downloaded it utterly free for my ps3 here - 115 games . com they have thousands and the best thing is they are all free too oh by the way 0:22 was magnificent

  • I have had my little mate for about 6 months now. My next door neighour has a rooster. You can guess what noise he makes now haha. Really smart bird's. He get's on fine with the cats and dogs, alway's play fighting with them. Really curious. I'll post a link when i get some time to record him.

  • it's an australian magpie

  • either that or it's lost

  • this is not magpie

    it's probably  Gymnorhina tibicen

  • And Gymnorhina tibicen is a magpie according to the CSIRO

  • I'm sorry but I'm Slovak and I don't know many tittles of birds in english

    But european magpie is from category corvidae this magpie is from category Artamidae

    but these two categories are very kindred

  • Understood...the accursed language barrier :-)

  • all corvids(crow family)can learn to talk

  • Magpies don't talk...they gargle...musically.

  • So how come I know what he wants ?

  • Believe it or not they can and do learn how to 'talk'. We used to feed a bunch at home [went through 5kgs of prime mince beef a fortnight :-(( ] and a couple of them quite clearly talked. Wild birds but tame enough to sit on your knee to be fed. At least two of a family of 9 used to clearly imitated the words "come on" as that was our call to them when they came in to feed. They'd bang on the front window and call 'come on'. Couldn't believe our ears to begin with.

  • Can you talk magpie? LOL. Neither can I.

  • This one fails! Unless it's speaking sparrow. lol

  • It's quite obviously speaking magpie. Sparrows speak at a higher pitch and with much shorter word construction.

  • why didn't we vote this fella in instead of rudd, he is just fit for the job, he talks in other languages, fly's all over the place and talks a lot of stuff we don't understand. lol . very awesome pet mate.

  • Ha ha, nice talks...

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