I think today's sick smiley goes to EHocking for his image of the crow eating of the anus. What would Hollywood do if it got hold of that!BronzeDog said:Thank you for that lovely image... We need a sick smiley.
I think today's sick smiley goes to EHocking for his image of the crow eating of the anus. What would Hollywood do if it got hold of that!BronzeDog said:Thank you for that lovely image... We need a sick smiley.
FreeChile said:Just curious. What and how did your Magpie eat?
Oh yeah? Well I once had a pet crow that was so smart that it learned to hover and eat out of the hummingbird feeder with a soda straw.hodgy said:When it was very young we fed it dog-food. Later we caught worms and things for it and when it was old enough to fly it pretty much fed itself (i.e. it would come back in the evenings without us needing to feed it properly - just treats).
Our neighbours had a pond and at the time of year when the tadpoles-just-turned-mini-frogs leave the pond en-masse the magpie went over there and ate loads of the little frogs. I think it would eat pretty much anything comprised largely of protein.
Tricky said:Oh yeah? Well I once had a pet crow that was so smart that it learned to hover and eat out of the hummingbird feeder with a soda straw.
LOL. It should have been well on the otherside of that boundary. No matter how smart a crow is, it can't "learn to hover". I was just getting amused by the "my crow is smarter than your crow" stories, or shall we call it "oneupcrowship".BronzeDog said:That's pretty impressive, and pretty close to a boundary in my head. Are you really being serious?
I'm just ribbing ya, hodgy. I like your story. But I seem to find almost everything funny. See my sig.hodgy said:I'm not trying to boast about my magpie - I find things like that interesting so I assume other people might too. I would like to hear other people's clever bird stories. I've got stories about other birds that we raised but the magpie was the cleverest.
Laughing has its risks, though. I once laughed so hard... well, I'd rather not go into that story, on second thought.Laughter and tears are both responses to frustration and exhaustion. I myself prefer to laugh, since there is less cleaning up to do afterward...
-----Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
BronzeDog said:Laughing has its risks, though. I once laughed so hard... well, I'd rather not go into that story, on second thought.
[defensive] well, you DID ask...[/defensive]FreeChile said:I think today's sick smiley goes to EHocking for his image of the crow eating of the anus. What would Hollywood do if it got hold of that!
Indeed! But I still find Mary Stewart's image unlikely. I mean crows would have to be very, very smart to tell the difference between an army parading on the 4th of July and one about to engage in battle, or a mob of protestors for that matter.Tricky said:Um... wouldn't the swords, spears, arrows etc. take care of the skin perforation problem?
In the case of the seagulls, the odors from the boat may be sufficient to attract attention. This may include smells of the equipment from previous catches or the smell, sight, and sound of the baits. In this case is just like giving them a good meal, they'll keep coming for more.aargh57 said:Free Chile,
Is the whole idea of crows following armies or following weak people in the desert that much different from seagulls following fishing boats? I don't see why you would discount it so much.
It is logical that after a few battles the birds would simply hang around. But consider that battles also occur in different locations.How many parades/protests of thousands of people did they have back then? Besides, wouldn't parades last a relatively short time while an army be on the march for days?
I don't really think that Mary Stewart had that in mind. It is unlikely that her knowledge of 4th century animal behavior was at all accurate or relevant. Also, she lived during the 1900's and was very familiar with modern wars. So she probably projected her images of these wars into her novels. The crows in her novels are probably there simply for dramatic effect, coming from the image of the crow that we all seem to share, that of foretelling death. It is more or less like Teen Titans' character Raven, who is the spiritual one in the cartoon. Raven behaves nothing like a Raven, just like Stewart's crows, in that respect.Soapy Sam said:Mary Stewart was talking about the 4th century AD, when any large group of men on the move probably implied trouble. Though the Crystal Cave series is deliberately poetic in style and never meant to be taken as a source of information. Crows are so ubiquitous in the British countryside that some would certainly be stirred into flight by a group of mounted men. (Though a mob of crows are usually, though not always, actually rooks).
[slight derail]aargh57 said:Free Chile,
Just wanted to point out that most birds have a very poor sense of smell, so while they may very well be attracted to a fishing boat for the other reasons you mentioned (sounds and sight of the baits(although I think they probably recognize the boats themeselves as you will see gulls flying towards boats from a distance that they couldn't see the baits, not to mention the fact that often times the fishermen aren't putting the baits out yet and the gulls are still hanging around)) the smell is probably not one of them.
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