HELP!
I need to outsmart a BIRD BRAIN!
(feral pigeons and semi-ferals)
OK, I'm done!! I thought I had like 1000 times more brain than a PIGEON.
But as it turns out, they are smarter than I thought they were.
And the owner of the permission where I shoot soon might be wondering if my brain is up for the (killing) task....
HELP!
I need a little bit of tutoring in pigeon psychology — or whatever it is a hunter studies to understand his/her prey.
You see, I don't have much experience with hunting — stalking, hides, baiting, camouflage, all that good stuff.
'Cause I'm a city slicker, grew up that way, and I recently even upgraded my city slicker rating...., from a population of 300,000 to 10,000,000.
Yupp, believe me, it's a jungle out there....
So, how does a feral pigeon tick?
And how do I tick it off the list of the living (= one less to spread their infectuous poop all over my city)?
—>
I'll present you with 3 scenarios that torture my brain. Maybe you can help me understand them.
For each scenario I added a couple of questions that cause me brain pain.
My Experiences — Open for Your Interpretation 
Scenario 1a: Feral Pigeons
Location: An area of grass and trees where people often walk
Distance to humans: 2 yards — I can walk toward them and they won't even hurry up to get out of my way!
Scenario 1b
Location: Same place — this time the same pigeons sit on a tall tree, in apparent safety!
Distance to humans: When I appear slowly from behind a natural hide — at a distance of 20 yards — they usually flee in less than 5 seconds!
Q1: Why such a DIFFERENCE between 1a and 1b?!? 
Q2: How do I PREVENT them to flee in Scenario 1b? 
Scenario (2a): Semi-Feral Pigeons
Location: A cow farm, basically a large corral 50y x 100y
Distance to humans: Several workers frequently go all over the corral.
The pigeons feed on the ground or sit on the fences.
I could get so close that I shot 40 pigeons in 4 hours. Beginner's luck.
Ranges mostly 10 to 40y.
After a kill they flew off, only to return shortly after.
Scenario (2b)
Distance to humans: So close that I shot 80 in 8 hours, same as before (ranges 10 to 40y). Beginner's DUMB luck.
Note that they avoided roosting on a water tower where I had nailed 10 of them in Scenario 2a.
Scenario (2c)
Distance to humans: So far away that I shot 2 pigeons in 3 hours!
They circled overhead many times, but rarely ever landed.
When they saw me approach and getting to about 60y range — they fled.
There are no natural hides.
Scenarios 2a, 2b, and 2c all took place within one month.
Q3: Was 2c simply a FREAK incident, an unusual coincidence?!
Q4: Do pigeons RECOGNIZE human beings? How can they tell me apart from the workers - from whom they don't flee?
Q5: Do pigeons LEARN that a certain place or a certain person is dangerous to their health? What are the things they learn or recognize: colors, faces, cars, times of the day, a person with a gun....?
Q6: How can I CONFUSE THEIR LEARNING — or help them to forget or to unlearn — and to start trusting places and people again?
Q7: If I set up a popup blind in the middle of the corral to hinde in — will they not soon associate the presence of the blind with their comrades deaths — and stay away?
—————————————
Q8: I understand that deer and other similarly sophisticated mammals are very cautious, and very perceptive to sight, sound, and smell. Very smart.
But pigeons?!? C'mon!
They got BIRD brains.
That leads to the next scenario.
Scenario (3a)
Distance to humans: I sit in my tiny backyard and I have humming birds and 10 other types of birds, small and large, sit in the bushes and the grass around me.
Range 2 to 5 yards.
I move, they stay.
Scenario (3b)
Distance to humans: Pigeons never enter my backyard with me present.
If I do make a slow careful appearance they immediately rush off! Every other winged visitor stays.
Q9: Why the difference between pigeons (3b), and other birds (3a)?
Thanks for your help! Together we'll show them bird brains who's got more of a brain!
Matthias


(feral pigeons and semi-ferals)
OK, I'm done!! I thought I had like 1000 times more brain than a PIGEON.
But as it turns out, they are smarter than I thought they were.

And the owner of the permission where I shoot soon might be wondering if my brain is up for the (killing) task....
HELP!
I need a little bit of tutoring in pigeon psychology — or whatever it is a hunter studies to understand his/her prey.

You see, I don't have much experience with hunting — stalking, hides, baiting, camouflage, all that good stuff.

'Cause I'm a city slicker, grew up that way, and I recently even upgraded my city slicker rating...., from a population of 300,000 to 10,000,000.
Yupp, believe me, it's a jungle out there....
So, how does a feral pigeon tick?

And how do I tick it off the list of the living (= one less to spread their infectuous poop all over my city)?

—>
I'll present you with 3 scenarios that torture my brain. Maybe you can help me understand them.
For each scenario I added a couple of questions that cause me brain pain.



Location: An area of grass and trees where people often walk
Distance to humans: 2 yards — I can walk toward them and they won't even hurry up to get out of my way!

Location: Same place — this time the same pigeons sit on a tall tree, in apparent safety!
Distance to humans: When I appear slowly from behind a natural hide — at a distance of 20 yards — they usually flee in less than 5 seconds!





Location: A cow farm, basically a large corral 50y x 100y
Distance to humans: Several workers frequently go all over the corral.
The pigeons feed on the ground or sit on the fences.
I could get so close that I shot 40 pigeons in 4 hours. Beginner's luck.
Ranges mostly 10 to 40y.
After a kill they flew off, only to return shortly after.

Distance to humans: So close that I shot 80 in 8 hours, same as before (ranges 10 to 40y). Beginner's DUMB luck.

Note that they avoided roosting on a water tower where I had nailed 10 of them in Scenario 2a.

Distance to humans: So far away that I shot 2 pigeons in 3 hours!

They circled overhead many times, but rarely ever landed.
When they saw me approach and getting to about 60y range — they fled.
There are no natural hides.
Scenarios 2a, 2b, and 2c all took place within one month.





—————————————

But pigeons?!? C'mon!

They got BIRD brains.
That leads to the next scenario.

Distance to humans: I sit in my tiny backyard and I have humming birds and 10 other types of birds, small and large, sit in the bushes and the grass around me.
Range 2 to 5 yards.
I move, they stay.

Distance to humans: Pigeons never enter my backyard with me present.
If I do make a slow careful appearance they immediately rush off! Every other winged visitor stays.

Thanks for your help! Together we'll show them bird brains who's got more of a brain!

Matthias