Kerala Crow’s 12g Gold Heist Ends at Mango Tree Library Reunion

Kerala crow’s gold bangle caper unfolds in Trikkalangode: a 12g bracelet vanishes from Rukmini’s backyard, only to resurface three years later in a fallen nest beneath a mango tree. “Can a crow steal gold?” and “Do crows remember shiny things?” trend as Anvarsadath and daughter Fatima hand the treasure to the local library, where Rukmini and her husband reclaim the bangle, now in pieces. “We'll leave it up to you to imagine what could have transpired,” the town muses.
After Rukmini’s three-year search turns surreal beneath a mango tree, the bangle’s rediscovery spawns fresh speculation: did the crow intend to outwit Kerala’s best gold hunters, or just redecorate its nest? Searches spike for “how do birds collect shiny objects” and “lost jewelry found in nests.” Library staff, with deadpan calm, deliver the gold with a twist—evidence of avian taste for high-value bling and a subtle reminder: your backyard may be a jewelry box for local wildlife.
Three years after a crow’s 12-gram gold bangle theft in Trikkalangode, the jewelry was retrieved from a mango tree nest and returned to its owner via public library lost-and-found.