redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
Redbird ([personal profile] redbird) wrote in [community profile] birdfeeding2024-01-19 04:41 pm

turkeys

We have been seeing wild turkeys again in the last few days. I stopped to photograph a pair of turkeys this afternoon, and a passerby told me that he had been feeding turkeys, and specifically that one of them was eating peanuts from his hand.

I just said that they're not afraid of anything, but can be aggressive, especially in mating season, then continued on my way.

This is in Boston, where we've had a very mild winter, though today is closer to normal for winter (27 F/-3 C when I was out earlier).
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)

Yay!

[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith 2024-01-19 10:45 pm (UTC)(link)
>>We have been seeing wild turkeys again in the last few days.<<

That is so awesome. :D

>> I just said that they're not afraid of anything, but can be aggressive, especially in mating season, then continued on my way.<<

Yyyyeah. Turkeys are the top of the birdfeeder pecking order. Ahead of raptors. Because they are just that fucking big and mean.

Using a computer program, Miller collapsed that data set into “ability scores” for each species: a single number that describes each species’ ability to compete with others. It ranged from an alpha bird (the Wild Turkey at 66.93) to the meekest of the bunch (Eurasian Tree Sparrow at –24.46).

>>This is in Boston, where we've had a very mild winter, though today is closer to normal for winter (27 F/-3 C when I was out earlier).<<

That used to be typical here, we'd spend much of the winter in the 20s, sometimes 30s, sometimes teens, but rarely above freezing for long. Now it's been mostly mild, and it's supposed to rain again next week. 0_o In January.
a_natural_beauty: (Default)

[personal profile] a_natural_beauty 2024-01-20 11:58 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder what it would be like to be that close to and feed a wild turkey! I bet your photos turned out nicely!