As for the restaurant itself, I can't say much about it. I believe it started off on Green Street in Five Points, just down from Group Therapy then moved to its current (now former..) location in the late 90s. Since the name involved birds and I don't do birds, I never inquired further into its claim to fame, but by osmosis got the idea it was a rotisserie chicken operation. I guess the wire is now bare.

Birds and Ben & Jerry's were owned by Daniel Rickmann before Birds got sold in Feb 2008. Birds original location was where yo-burrito currently is located and the new birds location was a resteraunt called the filling station which Daniel rickmann also owned. Daniel was planning on franchising both the fill station and birds on a wire. The one on devine street was his protype store which had a retial area and ben & jerry's inside. Birds also had a location in Lexington which closed prior to Rickmann selling the business and a location in the Meridian Building that has also closed. The only restuaraunt of Rickmanns that is still open is MoMos Bistro on Devine Street.


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When Birds on a wire moved from its old location (where Yo Burrito) now is, it was a big push forward for the restaurant. The foods was excellent, they had somewhat of a night life with a decent bar scene. I ate there a number of times and the food was good. This was around 2001-2002.

Yeah, I doubt birds closed because of the economy how about they closed for the reason all businesses close bad ownership and management. Lets face it the new owners ruined a Columbia Tradition, and then arent man enough to say its our fault but blame it on the economy. I mean from what i saw the raised there prices twice in less than a year and there food was sub-par under the new ownership, and they didnt advertise, and it was just bad all the way around. Yes the economy is bad but lets all take some responsiblities for our actions. I was just at Carabas On Saturday night and it was pack with a 30 minute wait. I dont see dianes On devine going bankrupt they are still busy as ever at dinner. Sure people are not buying appitzer and bottles of wine like we have in the past but people are still spending money. The economy didn't stop we all need to eat so resturaunts can still make money if they are good enough.

You will need:

Needle nosed pliers -the kind that cut AND bend.


Wire! I use 0.8mm aluminium craft wire. I buy it from eBay, but if you are lucky a local art shop might stock it, although they often charge twice as much.

The black is enameled. The copper coloured isn't copper, it's just copper coloured aluminium. 

I have become a little obsessed about wire. Different metals and thicknesses affect the result of a project considerably. I find even changing the thickness by 0.1 of a mil makes a difference to your outcome.


Pictures of robins. If you go to Google, select images and search for robins you should find more than enough

Get a long piece of wire. I start by bending the beak and then go on to make the shape of the body and tail. Then the wire meets up at the beak again. I twist the second beak piece around the first until I reach the end of the beak, and then twist the wire back over the beak until I reach the birds face again.

Leave any excess wire attached for the next step.

Take the length of spare wire attached to the beak and bring it around to attach to the back of the neck. It needs to arch around because it will make up the side of the robins head. Wrap it tightly around the wire at the back of the neck to hold it in place. Then arch it back around and secure it to the beak the same way. 

Chop off any excess wire.

Get a 30 cm ish piece of black wire. Attach the center of this wire to the top of the robins head by wrapping it round once. Then bring each half down to meet the wire representing the side of the robins head and twist it around it. This twist is important as it represents the birds eye, so be careful where on the robins head you place it. 


The rest of the spare wire left will become the feet. Bend the two wires horizontally away from each other towards where you think the legs would be. At that point bend them down to be legs. Bend the wire at the bottom of the legs to become the front toes. These bend at the end. Use the pliers to bend the wire back on it's self sharply. Then wrap the wire back around the toe. All the way back to the bottom leg. Repeat for the three shorter toes. Then wrap the wire up the leg and attach the spare end to the body side.

Make a length of wire into a wing shape joined at the bottom. Leave a good amount of wire free so you have two lengths of wire left at the bottom of the wing. Bend one of these pieces up across the wing and wrap it around the opposite side. Once you get to the top of the wing, attach it to the wire there.

The other wire needs to attach to the back of the bird above the tail.

Repeat on other side

Get a long piece of copper coloured wire. 

Attach it at the center to the Robin s forehead just above it's beak.

Run the wire above and round the robins eye and wing, fastening it by wrapping it around the black wire where suitable.

Then do the same on the other side. Cover the rest of the breast with copper wire and there you go. Experiment and please let me know how you get on!




Someone asked in the comments if I had made any robins with thicker wire for outside. I hadn't, so I tried it. Its not easy to retain the detail and there's no colour because garden wire doesn't come in pretty colours (at least not that I have seen ) but here you go. They're still quite nice: )

Thanks! I made a larger redshank, and a king Fisher with blue wire. Most of the thicker wire I have found is of a dull metal grey, which has put me off, though I have considered painting it. Have a look at instagram.com/janecurthoys/ if you like :)

In the Midwest, we often see a flock of birds lined up across telephone wires. If we stopped and watched the flock, we would see an interesting dance before the birds all took off for their next destination. The dance follows this pattern.

I think of this pattern as jitter-bugging around a threshold between the current organizational state and a new organizational form. Like birds on a wire, engaging in iterations of taking off, returning, and taking off again, this back and forth between the current state and going towards something new is a pattern that can be noticed and help organizational leaders understand when their organization is transforming.

Bird Wire consists of a nylon-coated stainless steel wire that is suspended between a series of poles. The wire is attached to springs, when birds land on the wire; the springs make an unstable landing surface.

That is, a bird dropping its feet on a wire isn't completing a circuit between two different potentials but it is making a parallel circuit. This is what confuses a lot of people I think including me. If the usual laws for parallel circuits apply, why doesn't it apply to birds on a wire?

But that doesn't satisfy me because we are dealing with a $\mathrm{kV}$ scale wire a lot of the time. You'd need for the bird, which is effectively a bag of water and such, to have a lot of resistance for that to work, but maybe it does.

This means that the voltage as a function of distance barely changes. So the voltage difference between two birds feet is essentially 0, because the potential on each foot is practically the same. The potential difference between the wire and the ground might be large; but the bird isn't offering any pathway between the wire and anything at much lower voltage. It only offers a pathway between it's two legs, and so voltage difference remains small.

To add on to that, the bird has a lot more relative resistance than the wire, since the wire is supposed to minimize voltage drop across it. This means that most of the current will also flow through the wire, and relatively little current would flow through the bird.

Suppose the wire is equivalent to 000-gauge copper, 0.0618 ohms per 1000 ft. Suppose it's carrying close to its rated capacity: 300A. Suppose a bird, maybe the size of a dove, with legs that grip the wire about 1 inch apart. According to my calculation, the potential difference between points 1 inch apart along the length of that wire will be about 1.6 millivolts.

This implies that the current flowing through birdie is $$I=V/R=2.2\times10^{-3}\ \mathrm V/2000\ \mathrm\Omega=1.1\times10^{-6}\ \mathrm A.$$ (Draining a AA battery with that current would take a hundred years or more.) The quoted chicken research paper also mentions that a stunning current of $81\ \mathrm{mA}$ is unreliable; that is $80\,000$ times the current flowing through birdie on the wire, so there is room for error, acid rain or voltage spikes.

Here is a circuit diagram depicting your parallel, unroasted bird. As you can see, I have drawn the wire as a sequence of adjacent resistors, each with a length of $10\ \mathrm{cm}$. Normal circuit diagrams simply ignore the micro-ohms and draw a straight wire. Shame on them! Guys, that confuses people! Every wire is a resistor! True, each $10\ \mathrm{cm}$ segment by itself is a very weak resistor; but a million of them are annoying enough that the power plant must up the ante to many kilovolt.

I should perhaps add that we could reach the same conclusion easier. The voltage calculation is quite unnecessary if we assume that the bird does not change the overall current through the wire, before and after. Then the current (whatever voltage is driving it) simply splits according to the ratio of the resistances, which is about $10^9$, so that $1/10^9$th of the $1000\ \mathrm A$ going through the wire is going through the bird, which is $10^{-6}\ \mathrm A.$

Electric potential is a difference between two points, and considering that the wire the bird is standing on has little resistance, the potential difference would be negligible. That means when the bird is standing with both feet on the wire, the potential difference between its two feet is minuscule and with its own high resistance, will most definitely not hurt it. e24fc04721

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