
Photo: Sue Vincent
“Why did they leave these things here?” Farrow scratched his head with a sharp talon.
“Decoration?”
Farrow glowered at the brown excuse for a mate. She lay good eggs and she did not complain when the worms he’d brought home to the nest were torn or half-eaten. He had to give her that. But she never did learn to keep her beak shut when rhetorical questions were posed. Where someone with a bigger birdbrain would know to quietly wait for him to impart wisdom, she thought she had something to contribute. It was exhausting.
“There is no such thing as decorations, Ferrolina,” he attempted a didactic tone, perched atop the side of the nest and peering downward at the log below them. “All actions have a reason, and even those that end up beautifying have another motive underneath.”
“There’s moss underneath,” she quipped, egging him on.
Oh, she knew he held himself in puffed regard and thought the lesser of her. He could be tedious. But she had the best nest location in the area, and his pride meant he could not let her (or the offspring, when they hatch) go hungry. It was enough. And under all his bluster he was not cruel, only vain. Better than the lowlife who’d left her mama half starved and the lot of them freezing in an exposed nest when she was growing. Two of her nest-mates hadn’t made it, and the dud was unceremoniously rolled out to splat frighteningly to the distant ground. None of that was going to happen to her four egglings. And she was adamant all four would make it. She knew it in her heart that none were duds.
He narrowed his eyes at her. Sometimes he thought he’d detected some snark mixed in with her idiocy, but her expression was so mild he determined it impossible. He must be putting wit where there was naught but simple-mindedness.
“Yes, there is moss there indeed,” he noted, as patiently as he could muster. Mates were a lot like younglings. You couldn’t fault them for what they did not have. “Some concepts are too difficult for females to understand. You are better suited for the nest, to concentrating on keeping the offspring warm.”
Ferrolina swallowed a chirp. He was so easy to poke. “They sure are pretty to look at,” she added. “But they will not fill tummies.”
Farrow straightened. It was his expression, oft repeated, that she had finally managed to internalize. It deserved a reward. “Indeed,” he nodded his head and preened a moment. “And I shall be soon back with something that will.”
Ah… their attitudes seem awfully human π
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some say humans did evolve from birds (though some attitudes apparently did not evolve all that much yet … ;))
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Some things seem common to all expressions of life π
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LOL, probably … π Though, to be fair, not all males or females or in-between fall into boxes … π
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No… labels and boxes are far too neat π
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Yeah, and I’m not particularly good at keeping labels on or fitting into (or staying in) boxes. π
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Me neither π
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π
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Life in the bird world is very similar to the human one, isn’t it?
Fun one.
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Seems pretty familiar, eh? π I’d think we ‘adopted’ these routines from them, rather than the other way around, seeing that they’d been around a bit longer … π But, who knows, maybe other bird species behave differently … π
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You may have a point there…
π
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ππ¦
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And there’s a male who rules the roost… π
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Or does he? …. π
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Who thinks he does…
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π
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Thank you!
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