American Thanksgiving and turkeys are forever, inextricably linked together. Turkey may very well have been served at the first Thanksgiving in Plymouth more than 400 years ago, and today the delicious bird is so ubiquitous that consumers fret over turkey prices and whether its meat makes you sleepy. Yet in addition to being a food, turkeys are also birds — intelligent birds, at that.
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The Drift
Welcome to today's issue of Carolina Naturally 'Nuff Said! Today is June 21, 2023 Today is: World Music Day On This Day In History...
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A New York City owl has learned to hunt on his own after escaping from the Central Park Zoo. Flaco, a 13-year-old Eurasian eagle-owl, flew...
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Julie d’Aubigny was a singer and an expert sword fighter in 17th century France. Her father, who was also an expert swordsman, fought off al...
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Some believe that horses possess a unique “sixth sense” that allows them to detect dangers that other animals miss–like feelings or perhaps ...
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