As I mentioned previously, I’m going to be doing a speed writing event on the weekend that ends with MLK Jr Day, and I invite ye all to come along. I’m going to write about 12,500 words a day from Friday Jan 17th through Monday Jan 20th. You can set more modest goals and only participate a few of those days if you please. Fiction or non-fiction is fine. Post in the comments or elsewhere with links in the comments, or be shy / inviso and just mention your word count when you get to resting points. I’ll read yours if you read mine; critique can be as baby-gloved as you please. Holler in the comments if you want to join.
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In the Pacific Northwest of the USA, it’s mostly true that most of our birds are drab as hell. You want a red-ass red bird, you gotta head east of the mountains. The Puget Sound isn’t where color goes to die, but it’s close. It’s where color goes to take a restless nap under fungus-hued clouds. The famous red on a migratory thrush‘s breast is fine. It can look good under the right light. Nothing on a cardinal tho.
The american robin’s cousin the varied thrush is easily the fanciest thrush in Washington, with more than a red breast. It’s streaked with black and orange, like a local oriole wannabe (less bright than that bird of course; gotta stay grunge). I’ve seen them on my porch, seen ’em in a tree, back at the old apartment complex. Doubt I’ll see them at my new home. In all, fewer than five sightings. When I look them up on the web, it is said they are “common.” Not in my experience.
I know nothing about them except that they are thrushes, they look cool, and I felt lucky to see them. I often struggle to remember their name, wanting to call them “painted thrushes” for some reason. What do you know about varied thrushes?
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Great American Satan says
nothing much, it seems…