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  • April 26, 2017 - Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan - Pakistani villagers harvest wheat in a field on the outskirts of Lahore. Pakistan is in a position to produce bumper wheat crop this year but it depends on weather conditions in April if the temperature remains average the country's wheat output is expected to cross 27 million tons, but if temperature is above the average for the year wheat output is likely to remain 25.5 million tons. (Credit Image: © Rana Sajid Hussain/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170426_zaa_p133_001.jpg
  • May 17, 2017 - Qatar Red Crescent Society (QRSC) discuss with other organisations the 2017 wheat project for Syria, in the Turkish town of Gaziantep. The project aims to support the cultivation of wheat in the areas under the control of the opposition in Syria, in order to increase wheat production, to create jobs in agriculture, and to contribute to  resource development in Syria (Credit Image: © Louai Barakat/ImagesLive via ZUMA Wire)
    20170517_zap_d99_016.jpg
  • April 29, 2019 - Punjab, Punjab, India - An Indian farmer seen carrying a bushel of wheat during the harvesting in Punjab..Harvesting of wheat has begun in India, one of the world's largest producers of the crop. Agriculture is the main livelihood of about 60 percent of India's 1.2 billion people. (Credit Image: © Saqib Majeed/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190429_zaa_s197_013.jpg
  • April 29, 2019 - Punjab, Punjab, India - An Indian farmer seen harvesting  wheat at a field in Punjab..Harvesting of wheat has begun in India, one of the world's largest producers of the crop. Agriculture is the main livelihood of about 60 percent of India's 1.2 billion people. (Credit Image: © Saqib Majeed/SOPA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190429_zaa_s197_001.jpg
  • May 27, 2019 - Tambov Region, Tambov region, Russia - Harvesting of wheat in the Tambov region (Credit Image: © Demian Stringer/ZUMA Wire)
    20190527_zap_s171_003.jpg
  • May 19, 2017 - Lalitpur, Nepal - A Nepalese woman farmer uses a sickle to harvest wheat in Lalitpur, Nepal. (Credit Image: © Skanda Gautam via ZUMA Wire)
    20170519_zap_g200_002.jpg
  • May 19, 2017 - Lalitpur, Nepal - A Nepalese woman farmer uses a sickle to harvest wheat in Lalitpur, Nepal. (Credit Image: © Skanda Gautam via ZUMA Wire)
    20170519_zap_g200_006.jpg
  • May 19, 2017 - Lalitpur, Nepal - Nepalese women farmers use sickle to harvest wheat in Lalitpur, Nepal on Friday, May 19, 2017. (Credit Image: © Skanda Gautam via ZUMA Wire)
    20170519_zap_g200_001.jpg
  • May 19, 2017 - Lalitpur, Nepal - A Nepalese woman farmer uses a sickle to harvest wheat in Lalitpur, Nepal. (Credit Image: © Skanda Gautam via ZUMA Wire)
    20170519_zap_g200_004.jpg
  • March 31, 2019 - Hebi, Hebi, China - Hebi, CHINA-Aerial photography of wheat fields can be seen in Hebi, central China’s Henan Province. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    20190331_zaa_s145_013.jpg
  • June 10, 2017 - San Pietro Vernotico, Italy - A drone view of farmer works during harvest wheat in San Pietro Vernotico, South of Italy, on June 10, 2017. (Credit Image: © Manuel Romano/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20170610_zaa_n230_546.jpg
  • May 1, 2019 - Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan - Pakistani farmer's family busy in harvesting & thrashing the wheat crops in current procurement wheat season in their fields in suburb of Lahore. As damage due to widespread hailstorm, torrential rains, and gusty winds earlier in the week damaged up to 150,000 tons of standing mature wheat crop in the Punjab province, an official estimate showed on Tuesday. Large-scale rain and hailstorm were also reported on April 16 and Pakistan Meteorological Department has forecast a wave of downpour of similar intensity on April 17. The damage to standing wheat crop has also been estimated due to lodging (bending) of plants over a vast area, an initial assessment prepared by Provincial Agriculture Department said.Pakistani As harvesting starts, Punjab now expects to reap 29.55 million tons wheat against earlier estimates of over 39 million tons, as a combination of climate change – hailstorms, windstorms, persistent rains– and rust attack took toll on the crop. (Credit Image: © Rana Sajid Hussain/Pacific Press via ZUMA Wire)
    20190501_zaa_p133_439.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Two Red Poppies In Wheat Field (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_180.jpg
  • November 3, 2018 - Kathmandu, NP, Nepal - Nepalese woman separates rice grains from grains and the glumes, or husks using a traditional winnowing method at outskirts of Kathmandu, Nepal on Saturday, November 03, 2018. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the landlocked country, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Narayan Maharjan/NurPhoto via ZUMA Press)
    20181103_zaa_n230_001.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Red Flower In Field (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_161.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Cattails In The Sunset (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_079.jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 20 October 2020 -  Agricultural landscapes photographed near Durbanville in the Western Cape. World Food Day was commemorated this week during a time where levels of hunger have increased due to the pandemic. Unemployment in South Africa has risen to 14.1 million after 2.2 million jobs were lost in the second quarter of 2020, and many households have been faced with increasing poverty. Picture Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA)
    Agriculture_food-security-179.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Combine Harvester, North Yorkshire, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_253.jpg
  • July 21, 2019 - Combine Harvester, North Yorkshire, England (Credit Image: © John Short/Design Pics via ZUMA Wire)
    20190721_zza_rf01_252.jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 20 October 2020 -  Agricultural landscapes photographed near Durbanville in the Western Cape. World Food Day was commemorated this week during a time where levels of hunger have increased due to the pandemic. Unemployment in South Africa has risen to 14.1 million after 2.2 million jobs were lost in the second quarter of 2020, and many households have been faced with increasing poverty. Picture Henk Kruger/African News Agency (ANA)(ANATOPIX)
    Agriculture_food-security-1578.jpg
  • September 22, 2018 - Richmond, Virginia, United States of America - Kevin Harvick (4) battles for position during the Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Virginia. (Credit Image: © Chris Owens Asp Inc/ASP via ZUMA Wire)
    20180922_zaa_a161_025.jpg
  • September 30, 2018 - Concord, North Carolina, United States of America - Kevin Harvick (4) races during the Bank of America ROVAL 400 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina. (Credit Image: © Chris Owens Asp Inc/ASP via ZUMA Wire)
    20180930_zaa_a161_063.jpg
  • September 22, 2018 - Richmond, Virginia, United States of America - Kevin Harvick (4) leads the field to the green flag to start the Federated Auto Parts 400 at Richmond Raceway in Richmond, Virginia. (Credit Image: © Chris Owens Asp Inc/ASP via ZUMA Wire)
    20180922_zaa_a161_010.jpg
  • June 14, 2018 - Beigaoli, China - Wheat straw packs are seen in Beigaoli Village in Xingtang County, north China's Hebei Province. Farmers here pack wheat straw as materials for power plants. wyl) (Credit Image: © Liang Zidong/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20180614_zaf_x99_079.jpg
  • June 11, 2017 - Cangzhou, China - A farmer arranges harvested wheat in Nanpi County, north China's Hebei Province. More than 70 percent of summer wheat have been harvested across the country. (Credit Image: © Mu Yu/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20170611_zaf_x99_092.jpg
  • June 11, 2017 - Cangzhou, China -  A harvester collects wheat in Nanpi County, north China's Hebei Province. More than 70 percent of summer wheat have been harvested across the country.  (Credit Image: © Mu Yu/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20170611_zaf_x99_094.jpg
  • June 7, 2017 - Beijing, Beijing, China - Beijing, CHINA-June 7 2017: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY. CHINA OUT) ..The wheat field located in the central area of Beijing is called as the most experience wheat field because of the rising housing price in Beijing. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    20170607_zaa_s145_125.jpg
  • April 29, 2019 - Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestinian Territory - Palestinian farmers use a threshing machine as they harvest wheat crop at a field in an area adjacent to the border with Israel, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip. Khan Younis, a city bordering Israel, is one of the largest agricultural areas in the Gaza Strip. (Credit Image: © Ashraf Amra/APA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190429_zaf_ap3_085.jpg
  • June 14, 2017 - Cangzhou, China - Villagers air wheat in Xingji Township of Cangzhou, north China's Hebei Province.  (Credit Image: © Fu Xinchun/Xinhua via ZUMA Wire)
    20170614_zaf_x99_072.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_039.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_038.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
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  • April 29, 2019 - Khan Younis, The Gaza Strip, Palestine - Farmers east of Khan Younis city southern the Gaza Strip harvest wheat. (Credit Image: © Hassan Jedi/Quds Net News via ZUMA Wire)
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_001.jpg
  • May 1, 2019 - Campo MourãO, Brazil - CAMPO MOURÃO, PR - 01.05.2019: AGRICULTORES INICIAM PLANTIO DE TRIGO PR - Rural farmers in Campo Mourão, in the Center-West Region of Paraná, started planting wheat, encouraged by the prices practiced in the agricultural market. In the photo, planting of wheat in rural property in Campo Mourão. (Credit Image: © Dirceu Portugal/Fotoarena via ZUMA Press)
    20190501_zaa_f109_135.jpg
  • South Africa - Cape Town - 1 September 2020 - Canola fields near Durbanville. According to an article by Wandile Sihlobo for Agricultural Economics Today "...the good rains that the Western Cape received over the past couple of months will have a meaningful contribution to South Africa’s 2020/21 winter crop production. The data released by the Crop Estimates Committee on August 27 shows that South Africa’s 2020/21 wheat, barley and canola production could increase by 28% y/y, 46% y/y and 29%, respectively, to 1.96 million tonnes, 505 215 tonnes and 122 820 tonnes. The aforementioned wheat harvest will be the largest in a decade, while barley and canola harvests are the largest on record Picture: Henk Kruger/African News Agency(ANA)
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_045.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_036.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_048.jpg
  • May 1, 2019 - Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestinian Territory - Suhaib  Qudih, 33, and his sister Naziha Qudih, 38, who were lost their legs after they were shot by Israeli forces during the weekly border protests, harvest wheat crop at their field, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, May 01, 2019. Unemployment rate in Palestine increased in 2018 to reach about 31% of the labour force participants compared with about 28% in 2017, where the number of unemployed individuals increased from 377 thousand in 2017 to 426 thousand in 2018  (Credit Image: © Ashraf Amra/APA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190501_zaf_ap3_208.jpg
  • May 1, 2019 - Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, Palestinian Territory - Suhaib  Qudih, 33, and his sister Naziha Qudih, 38, who were lost their legs after they were shot by Israeli forces during the weekly border protests, harvest wheat crop at their field, in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip, May 01, 2019. Unemployment rate in Palestine increased in 2018 to reach about 31% of the labour force participants compared with about 28% in 2017, where the number of unemployed individuals increased from 377 thousand in 2017 to 426 thousand in 2018  (Credit Image: © Ashraf Amra/APA Images via ZUMA Wire)
    20190501_zaf_ap3_202.jpg
  • August 19, 2017 - Bhaktapur, Nepal - Devotees offer prayers to a person concealed inside the idol of Deity Dipankar Buddha parading around the ancient city to receive prayers offered by devotees during Pancha Dan festival in Bhaktapur, Nepal on Saturday, August 19, 2017. The major highlights of the festival are giving away five elements also known as five summer gifts including wheat grains, rice grains, salt, money and fruit for prayers, wishing good health and prosperity. The Buddhists observe Pancha Dan by displacing gigantic antique statues of Deity Dipankar Buddha and devotees worshipping them across the city. (Credit Image: © Skanda Gautam via ZUMA Wire)
    RTI20170819_zap_g200_004.jpg
  • May 19, 2017 - Valencia, Carabobo, Venezuela - Deputy DELSA SOLORZANO (front) talks with the journalists on her arrival at the street parliamentarian meeting, where they discussed points of the political situation of the country. The event was held in the urbanization of the wheat field of Valencia, Carabobo state. (Credit Image: © Juan Carlos Hernandez via ZUMA Wire)
    20170519_zbp_he3_009.jpg
  • June 5, 2017 - Liaochen, Liaochen, China - Liaocheng, CHINA-June 5 2017: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY. CHINA OUT) ..Peasants are busy with wheat harvest in Liaocheng,east China's Shandong Province, June 5th, 2017. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    20170605_zaa_s145_177.jpg
  • September 30, 2018 - Charlotte, NC, U.S. - CHARLOTTE, NC - SEPTEMBER 30: #4: Kevin Harvick, Stewart-Haas Racing, Ford Fusion Jimmy John's New 9-Grain Wheat Sub during the running of the Inagural Bank of America ROVAL 400 on Sunday September 30, 2018 at Charlotte Motor Speedway in Concord North Carolina  (Photo by Jeff Robinson/Icon Sportswire) (Credit Image: © Jeff Robinson/Icon SMI via ZUMA Press)
    20180930_zaf_i88_304.jpg
  • August 17, 2017 - Puyang, Puyang, China - Puyang, CHINA-15th August 2017: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY. CHINA OUT) ..Lu Xicai, a 110-year-old veteran, is busy with making traditional wheat straw handicrafts at home in Huoyuan Village, Puyang City, central China's Henan Province. Lu joined the army in 1933 and fought with Japanese soldiers during the World War II. ''Old soldiers never die, they just fade away.'' The old soldier Lu doesn't fade away. He still lives a simple but healthy life. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
    RTIRTI20170817_zaa_s145_055.jpg
  • June 5, 2017 - Liaocheng, Liaocheng, China - Liaocheng, CHINA-June 5 2017: (EDITORIAL USE ONLY. CHINA OUT) Peasants are busy with summer farming in Liaocheng, east China's Shandong Province, June 5th, 2017. The Chinese lunar calendar divides the year into 24 solar terms. Grain in Ear, the 9th solar term, begins on June 5 this year and ends on June 20.The arrival of Grain in Ear signifies the ripening of crops such as barley and wheat. It is also a busy period for farmers. (Credit Image: © SIPA Asia via ZUMA Wire)
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  • Craig Moir riding through the wheat fields during Stage 1 of the Cape Pioneer Trek, on 17th of October 2016<br />
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Photo by: Oakpics/Cape Pioneer Trek/SPORTZPICS<br />
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  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_032.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_029.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_030.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_034.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_031.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_033.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_040.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_044.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_037.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_041.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_042.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_049.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_009.jpg
  • View Image Comparison<br />
View Both Images<br />
Even for a nation known for eye-popping rates of urbanization, what has happened along China's Pearl River Delta (Zhu San Jiao)<br />
over the past few decades is extraordinary.<br />
In 1988, an interlacing network of rivers and streams flowed through fertile alluvial soils full of rice paddies, wheat fields, mulberry orchards, and fish ponds. At that time, the region was mostly rural, with a population of roughly 10 million people scattered between several medium-sized cities, including Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Foshan, and Dongguan. Nearly three decades later, these cities have grown so rapidly that they have merged into an interconnected megalopolis with a population (42 million) greater than that of Australia, Argentina, or Canada.<br />
The satellite images above illustrate the dramatic growth. The bottom image was acquired by the Thematic Mapper on Landsat 5 on November 24, 1988; the top image was acquired by the Operational Land Imager on Landsat 8 on November 16, 2014. Rural areas - mainly farmland and forest - appear green. Urban areas are gray and white. Turn on the comparison tool to slide between the two images, and download the large images to observe the changes on a much finer scale.<br />
If taken as one entity, the Pearl River Delta region has overtaken Tokyo as the world's largest urban area - by size and population - according to an analysis of satellite and demographic data published by the World Bank. Between 2000 and 2010, the Pearl River Delta's urban spaces - defined as areas where the built environment covered more than 50 percent of the landscape in a given pixel - had expanded from 4,500 square kilometers to 7,000 square kilometers. (In 2010, Tokyo had a population of about 32 million people and covered about 5,600 square kilometers.) In the study, researchers used satellite data collected by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) and land cover data from the Landsat program. They also used demographic data pr
    rtisipausa_20553500.jpg
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A women farmer walks at her field at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_001.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A women farmer separates rice grains from the glumes, or husks using a traditional winnowing method at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_002.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A farmer sort potato will used as seed of potato at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_009.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A women farmer separates rice grains from the glumes, or husks using a traditional winnowing method at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_011.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A women farmer separates rice grains from the glumes, or husks using a traditional winnowing method at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_007.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A women farmer separates rice grains from the glumes, or husks using a traditional method at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_004.JPG
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_047.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_035.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_046.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_050.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: A COUPLE WHO RESCUED A JACKDAW CHICK DUBBED JAKE NOW FEEL HE THINKS OF THEM AS HIS PARENTS BECAUSE HE’S SO TAME HE EATS FROM THEIR MOUTHS – AND REFUSES TO GO BACK By Magnus News Agency A couple who rescued a wild jackdaw chick now feel he thinks of them as his parents because he’s so tame he eats from their MOUTHS – and refuses to go back to his own kind. Jake the jackdaw was just weeks old and without feathers when he was dropped by a seagull outside Jaime and Adrian Lee’s house in Axminster, Devon, in May. The tiny chick was about to become food for two cats until Adrian, 43, ran out of the house and scooped him up. With two holes in his neck and a damaged leg and wing, Jake’s days looked numbered but thanks to the love and care from Jaime and Adrian he’s now become a very unusual house guest. The perky bird now likes nothing better than collecting remote controls and keys to hide around the house and he enjoys eating Wheat Crunchies and FAB lollies. Jaime and Adrian took advice from vets to help raise Jake and even tried to release him to be back with own kind – but so far Jake has refused to leave. He’s also developed an interest in stealing five, ten and even £20 notes. Jackdaws are part of the corvid bird family, the same as magpies, crows and ravens, and a renowned for their intelligence and problem-solving ability. Housekeeper Jaime, 42, said the couple had spent about £600 on Jake building him perches and a special box outside, as well as feeding him mealworms and crickets. He’s even now the star of his own Facebook page called Jake’s blog. Jaime said when they first rescued Jake they weren’t sure he would survive his injuries. She said: “His first meal was actually a bit of Weetabix which I gave to him with a pipette, then my husband managed to give him some cat food in the afternoon. And by the morning after we rescued him, he was a totally different bird. “He’s so confident now and perky and full of it. We start
    MEGA528664_010.jpg
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: A women farmer separates rice grains from the glumes, or husks using a traditional method at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_004.JPG
  • October 25, 2016 - Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh, India - Allahabad: women farmer separates rice grains from the glumes, or husks using a traditional method at outskirts of Allahabad. Agriculture remains as important economic activity for the India, with wheat and rice being the main food crops. (Credit Image: © Prabhat Kumar Verma via ZUMA Wire)
    20161025_zap_v115_010.JPG
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