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Hi Jeanne,
    I'm glad you were able to save the little bird!  I volunteer at a wild 
bird rehab center (the Chattahoochee Nature Center in Atlanta) on weekends.
I am by no means an expert in bird rehab.  I'm basically an assistant who 
cleans cages and feeds the baby birds, but here's what I can offer:
- first off, it's illegal to keep any wild, native bird species.
- at the Nature Center, we release our mockingbirds and other such small
  species after hand raising without any kind of "life in the wild" training.
  With mockingbirds, most hunting behavior is instinctive, so no parents
  needed.
- when you release him, you should provide food as a backup until the 
  bird gets the hang of living on his own.  I would suggest you feed him
  at the spot where you plan to keep the food before you release him so 
  he knows where it is.  Leave the cage open and the food dish full on
  the back porch or whatever.  A temporary "food backup" is really about 
  all that baby birds get from their parents when they are weaning.
Good luck!
Roseanne
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|  |     Hi ,
    
    I recently raised and weaned baby Mourning Dove, only to lose him to a
    weasel after 3 months. I couldn't release him as he had no fear of
    humans. I tried, but he landed in the neighbors yard and the kids
    picked him up. I had him in an outside cage 8' x 6' x 4' covered with
    1' chicken wire.  It kept out large Rodents(raccoon), cat and Dogs, but
    a Weasel could get int. Pigeons will go into a house and you can lock
    them up each night, but wild birds seem to just roost in the highest
    spot in the cage.
    
    To prepare him for release, you could try to make sure he is not
    freindly to humans.  You could make sure he doesn't see you when he is
    being and fed and not handle him except to feed him. Perhaps when you
    start weaning him, you can make a lot of noise and motion when you put
    the dishes in, so he will learn to fear you.
    
    
    Some Phone numbers for you:
    
    Mass Audobon, Drumlin Farm, 617-259-9005 or 259-9500
                  Rutland       508-724-6612
                  Leominster    508-537-9807
    
    If one was to keep a Mockinbird as a pet, they would want to make sure
    he had a very large cage to exercise in.
    
    
    Good luck
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|  |     Update on Moxie, the baby mockingbird.
    
    Last night little Moxie excaped from his cage and flew away.  I knew
    this would be happening soon as he has been very "yancy" about being
    locked up.  
    
    He was still being spoon fed so I felt just awful about this and spent
    the evening beating myself up for not being able to catch him or from
    preventing him from flying away in the first place.  
    
    We could see him in the trees and as nightfall came, he must have
    settled down because we could no longer hear him.
    
    Early this morning, we heard him calling and could see him flying
    around from tree to tree.  When I went home for lunch, my husband said
    guess what?  Moxie's back!  I couldn't believe it!
    
    John (my hubby) apparently went outside and offered him food and what
    do you know, Moxie came down to a lower branch on the pine tree and
    begged to be fed.  
    
    This is great!  He's been playing on the lawn and exploring the skies
    and trees.  It's wonderful to see him learning how to become a real
    bird while remaining smart/trusting enough to come to us for food.  
    
    By George!  I think he's going to make it!!!!
    
    Jeanne
    
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