could be I vibe different these days
calmer, sweeter, or just bloody tired and not much of a threat
babies like you tend to fly away shrieking
but you stayed
watched me from rooftops and overhead branches
watched my dog roll and snort
scratch his back in the dry summer grass of the park
"do you know who I am?" I call into the trees
and you nod in your raven way
and drop bits of moss in my direction
two different worlds, my life
two vastly different worlds
my wild and slow
and my busy quick city with too many sounds and not enough hockey
but I'm learning
a cycle
a rhythm
a pulse
the city an inhalation
the nature a release
a balance
as delicate and strong as an ecosystem
or a baby raven on a branch
CrowTube Channel
Crowstagram
NFT Crowroom
A percentage of this post's rewards goes back to support the community.
All the stuff (pictures, words, etc.) I put in this post and any of my other posts is mine (unless otherwise stated) and can't be used by anyone else unless I say it's ok.
This post was shared and voted inside the discord by the curators team of discovery-it
Join our Community and follow our Curation Trail
Discovery-it is also a Witness, vote for us here
Delegate to us for passive income. Check our 80% fee-back Program
Thanks @discovery-it!
Is the feathery beak a baby thing?
Nope! Nares (beak feathers) stay forever. Sometimes they lose a few when they molt, but they grow back. I think they are there to protect nostrils from particulates and extreme temperatures, as well as provide a distinguishing facial feature. The way they rest on the beaks is unique, some split over the top, some cowlicked, some thick and completely covering the top, some long, some short...
Long answer for your short question but that's what you get for asking meeeee.
I like long answers and I've never seen such fancy nares on local birds, most nares just look like a few short whiskers
Maybe they don't need 'em so much down there. Oh, and it turns out the nares are the nostrils (I had it wrong), and the feathers are called the profoundly fancy name nostril feathers.
I looked up your crows and ravens and it looks like they do have some pretty decent ones, but a lot of the common Australian birds are more or less lacking them.
Clearly I haven't seen enough of our corvids up close. Looking at pictures of the local Pied Crow I see that you are right. There are a bunch in residence on the hill but they don't come close enough to see their nostril feathers
I was gonna say you could change that by feeding them to make them come closer, but then I remembered the cats. Probably why they stay up on the hill!
They aren't scared of the cats - they are complete thugs that have evicted the local hawk, circle you if you walk on the hill and rob the bird nests in the mulberry tree next to the houses. The little birds here have a hard time: Crows during the day, owls at night and then the cats at any time
I always love to see your crows, I always love to read your written lines... There's something frankly fascinating... thanks for sharing...
!discovery 35
!VSC
!PIZZA
Thank YOU!!!
$PIZZA slices delivered:
(7/15) @jlinaresp tipped @corvidae
I go from the raven to you and from you to the raven... and it is clear to me that there is something inside both that can hardly be expressed in words. 🤗
What a beautiful sentence and sentiment, thank you. 🖤