http://onion-peelings.blogspot.com/2009/12/satanism-dead-babies-lon-milo-duquette.html
(jk)
TAROTICA
http://tarotica.com
http://onion-peelings.blogspot.com/2009/12/satanism-dead-babies-lon-milo-duquette.html
(jk)
--------------------
Wow, that is some grudge.
What's the matter ?
do not feel special enough ?
*ponders*
Something...else is happening. I can feel it in my bones...
Or perhaps it's just PMT. :-)
*brood*
Fuck.
Have you ever seen what happens when blackbirds meet fieldfares and
squabble over the fermenting apples?
There is a university where they followed the behaviour of crows.
They annoyed the crows.
Years later the crows still attacked the participants of the studies.
I see crows and gulls fighting over food, while the doves simply ignore the
fighting.
There used to be loads of sparrows in amsterdam, but their habitat got
limited by insulation.
Interesting.
Blackbirds and fieldfares are a little different. Feildfares are
scandanavians who come over here during the winter. They have very
aggressive behavior - swooping at other birds, bobbing and spreading
thier tails and holding thier wings as if they were flexing thier
muscles. A few days ago all my birds were peacefully enjoying the
abundance of food I'd left out for them. Peace reigned and all sorts
of rare birds came to visit. Cuckoo's. Finches and wrens of all
varieties. One had a scarlet face. Then the viking invaders came in
to eat the windfall apples. At first the blackbirds ran away from the
attacking fieldfares and the raven family came to watch. Then the
blackbirds decided to mimick the invaders. The next day, the
blackbirds behaved exactly like the feildfares - the bobbing, the
spread tail feathers, the swooping, the staying up after bedtime, and
ravenously consuming the fermenting apples (that previously they
hadn't shown much interest in). I don't know if they mimicked the
shitting on other birds that the fieldfares do. That sounds funny,
but an accumulation of birdshit on feathers can erase it's natural
warm waterproof protection, which is a rather serious matter when it's
- 4. So this mob outside all got drunk on the fermenting apples and
there was some interesting displays of pissed aerobatics, panicked
flapping on landings, falling off perches... well - you can imagine!
Even the robins got in on the act briefly, taking a peck at the apples
then chasing each other. The ravens made occaisional sweeps through
the lot it seemed to try and break up the constant drunken brawling.
Then the apples ran out and the fieldfares went away and the
blackbirds sorbered up and slowly returned to normal, but the little
birds haven't come back yet.
> There used to be loads of sparrows in amsterdam, but their habitat got
> limited by insulation.
Here too.