Jackdaws and other Crows
Dohlen und andere Krähenvögel
Spooky it was when we sat in our living room reading quietly. We heard a noise in our chimney that made Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma shudder. Oh dear, it came again. We wanted to light a fire but our dear Bookfayries tried to prevent our Master from opening the door of our fireplace. Who knows what will come out there?
Nevertheless, our brave Master started the fire but it wouldn’t really burn happily. Instead our sitting room filled with smoke. The chimney had lost its draft.
Es war etwas unheimlich. Wir saßen ruhig lesend im Wohnzimmer, als wir ein Geräusch im Kamin hörten, das Siri 🙂 und 🙂 Selma erschaudern ließ. Da kam es schon wieder, dieses Geräusch. Eigentlich wollten wir ein Feuer machen, aber unsere beiden Buchfeen wollten Masterchen davon abhalten, die Tür des Kaminofen zu öffnen. Wer weiß, was da herauskommt?
Masterchen ließ sich nicht davon abhalten, ein Feuer anzuzünden, das jedoch nicht so recht brennen wollte. Wir räucherten unfreiwillig unser Wohnzimmer ein. Der Kamin hatte seinen Zug verloren.

Coughing we found the solution to this riddle. Jackdaws, these birds of the raven and crow family, love to build a cosy home in chimney pots until a hot fire is lighted down under. You often see jackdaws sitting on chimneys which are not secured against them moving in and preferably out of use. They sit there in pairs like on the balcony of their home to watch the busy world. Jackdaws are birds who stay together lifelong which is for about twenty years.
Hustend fanden wir des Rätsels Lösung. Dohlen, diese Krähen- bzw. Rabenvögel lieben es, in Kaminen ein gemütliches Nest zu bauen, bis unter ihnen ein Feuer angezündet wird. Deswegen seht ihr sie häufig auf Kaminen, die nicht gegen Vögel geschützt und seltener oder gar nicht benutzt werden, Dohlen sitzen. Als Paare sitzen sie dort wie auf dem Balkon ihrer Wohnung und betrachten sich das Getriebe der Welt. Dohlen sind Vögel, die sich lebenslang binden, das bedeutet für sie um die zwanzig Jahre.

These jackdaws are annoying. We can well understand their bad reputation. They were feared already in the early farming societies and still they are what is seen in superstition and art. Well known is Hitchcock’s film “The Birds” following Daphne du Maurier’s story. These black birds are used effectively as symbols of danger and death. Similarly used van Gogh birds of the crow family in one of his last paintings “Wheatfield With Crows” that is seen as harbinger of his death as he died a couple of weeks after finishing this painting.
Nicht nur dass uns die Dohlen geärgert haben, sie haben wie alle Rabenvögel eine ausnehmend schlechte Reputation. Schon in den ersten Ackerbaugesellschaften waren sie angstbesetzt, was sich bis heute in Aberglaube und Kunst fortsetzt. Am bekanntesten ist Hitchcocks Film “Die Vögel” nach einer Geschichte von Daphne Du Maurier. Dort werden diese Vögel als Gefahren- und Todessymbol anschaulich benutzt. Ähnlich bei van Gogh in seinem späten Gemälde “Weizenfeld mit Krähen“, das als Vorbote des Todes des Malers gedeutet wird, der ein paar Wochen nach Fertigstellung des Bildes starb.

The bad reputation of birds of the crow and raven family is partly due to Christian ideology that tends to judge everything black as sinful and negative. Therefore, these birds were seen as spreading pestilence during the middle ages. That they are scavenging in their search for food full of proteins is another reason for their reputation. Actually, raven, crows, and jackdaws should be respected as the most intelligent of all animals.
Die schlechte Reputation der Krähenvögel hat zum einen mit der christlichen Ideologie zu tun, die dazu tendiert alles Schwarze als negativ und sündig zu betrachten. So wurden im Mittelalter Krähenvögel als Verbreiter von Epidemien betrachtet. Die negative Bewertung dieser Vogelart hängt ferner damit zusammen, dass sie auf der Suche nach proteinhaltigem Futter auch Aas fressen. Eigentlich sollten die Dohlen und Raben geachtet werden, da sie zu den intelligentesten Tieren gehören.

You might know Picasso’s painting “Woman With Raven” from his blue period. In his painting Picasso celebrates the positive connection between human and raven. His friend the muse of Montmartre Marguerite Luc seems to kiss the raven. And do you know that the emperor Augustus had a raven as a pet? Wise folks never saw these black birds as negative. Watching our jackdaws they fascinate us with their black shimmering feathers and their elegant gait. We understand the old Teutons who worshipped Wotan on whose shoulders sat the ravens Hugin (symbolising memory) and Munin (symbolising knowledge). Hugin and Munin flew out to tell Wotan of the world’s events. Our dear Dina would love to have such two jackdaws.
Ihr kennt vielleicht Pablo Picassos Bild “Frau mit Rabe” aus seiner blauen Periode. Picasso zelebriert damit das positive Verhältnis von Mensch und Rabe, bei der seine Freundin, die in Montmatre beliebte Muse Marguerite Luc, den Raben zu küssen scheint. Und wisst ihr, dass Kaiser Augustus einen gezähmten Raben sich als Haustier hielt? Krähenvögel wurden keineswegs nur als böse Todbringer angesehen. Wenn wir unsere Dohlen betrachten, sind wir eher fasziniert von ihrem schwarzschimmernden Gefieder und eleganten Gang. Das waren auch die alten Germanen, in deren Mythologie die beiden Raben Hugin, der das Gedächtnis symbolisierte, und Munin, der das Wissen verkörperte, auf der Schulter Wotans saßen. Sie flogen aus und berichteten ihm vom Weltgeschehen. Solche zwei Dohlen hätte unsere liebe Dina auch gerne.

Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma love Wilhelm Busch’s story of Hans Huckebein the unlucky raven. The boy Fritz brings him to his aunt. The raven immediately behaves naughtily. In the end, he drinks the aunt’s liqueur and quite drunken he ends up dying in her knitting. But our Bookfayries wished him a happy end, therefore they rewrote this story.
Siri 🙂 und 🙂 Selma lieben die Geschichte von Hans Huckebein dem Unglücksraben, den der Knabe Fritz zu seiner Tante bringt, wo er einigen Aufruhr anzettelt, zum Schluss vom Likör betrunken leider in Tantes Strickzeug verendet. Sie hätten ihn ein fröhlicheres Ende gewünscht, darum schrieben sie die Geschichte um.
That’s for today.
All the best, so long
Das wär’s für heute von uns für euch.
Alles Gute, bis dann
The Fab Four of Cley
© Text and illustrations, Hanne Siebers and Klausbernd Vollmar, Cley next the Sea, 2021
The defense rests! I find these birds not guilty! 🙂
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Thank you very much for commenting.
These birds are not guilty, of course. Well, can birds be guilty?
Wishing you a great week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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🙂
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Neither birds nor butterflies can be guilty 😉
Quote of 🙂 Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma
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I’m glad about the butterflies being innocent. Thought I might have to change my gravatar. 🙂
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… maybe to a jackaw 😉
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I like those intelligent birds of the Crow family a lot. They are brave, and resourceful too. And unlike so many birds, they have little fear of people. We hava a cap on our wood-burner chimney that stops birds nesting inside. We would hate to kill their babies with fire or smoke. Nature must prevail over our human desire for warmth. 🙂
Love from Beetley, Pete, and Ollie. X
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Good evening, dear Pete,
we love these birds as well. And now we have a cap on our wood-burner chimney as well.
The jackdaws in our garden are very shy. Even when we move in the house they fly off – but come back soon. We read quite a lot of jackdaws and ravens that people kept as pets especially in the early middle ages but that seems to be impossible with our jackdaws. Dina made close contact with blackbirds. They come when she calls. But the jackdaws are quite different.
Thanks and keep well and happy
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Beautiful birds [like all crow family!] but they can get naughty! 😉
Wonderful photos!
Greetings to The Fab Four of Cley!
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Thank you very much, dear Marina 🙏 🙏
Actually, we like naughty birds – well, if they are not too naughty.
Do you know Busch’s story – one of the early comics – of naughty Hans Huckebein? We suppose you will love it.
With warm greetings from the cod sea
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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No I don’t, but I will look it up!
Happy Wednesday to the Fab Four of Cley! ☀️😊
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Dear Marina,
you found the works of Wilhelm Busch in every German household when I was a child. What few people know is that Busch was one of the few friends (maybe the only one) of Arthur Schopenhauer. Busch had the rare talent to be a great illustrator as well as a funny and critical writer.
All the best
Klausbernd 🙂
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Dear Klausbernd, apparently, I had seen his work! Being a friend of Schopenhauer says a lot about him! 😉
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Dear Marina,
there exists a little drawing of Schopenhauer with his poodle by Busch.
In a way Busch was the opposite to Schopenhauer and whereas Schopenhauer had no success during his lifetime Busch was extremely successful during his lifetime and even now every German knows his stories like this of Hans Huckebein.
Keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Makes perfect sense!
You too and everyone of the Fab Four of Cley, my friend!
😊🙏
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I suggest placing some steel mesh over the opening to prevent the birds from trying to smoke you out of your home. Naughty birds! 😊
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Dear John,
indeed, we put some steel mesh over our chimney. It took us some time because it’s so high to reach it.
Have a happy week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Hi Klaus, I’m glad you stopped those naughty birds! That’s a dangerous climb, glad you are safe. You have a great week too. 😊
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Dear John,
thank you.
As older I get as more I hate climbing up on ladders.
All the best
Klausbernd 🙂
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Raven is also a major character in Native American mythology, Dina.
Bodega Bay, north of San Francisco, is where “The Birds” was filmed. It has forever been one of my favorite hangouts. When I am there in the fall, I always think of the movie because the birds are gathering in large flocks.
We don’t have a chimney for birds to nest in, but we do have air vents that male flickers (woodpeckers) use to call their lady loves, or at least prove who is the loudest drummer in the forest. It’s like having Ringo Starr hanging out in your living room.
–Curt
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Dear Curt,
we didn’t know that “The Birds” were filmed in Bodega Bay where birds are gathering in large flogs. There must have been a lot of fiddling around to edit this film.
Funny to hear about your woodpecker, maybe not so funny for you.
Thanks and keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I watched the movie again the last time I went over to Bodega Bay. Not nearly as scary. 🙂
The flicker is bothersome, but who am I to get in the way of true love? –Curt
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Es sind kluge Vögel. Ich mag sie 🙂
Sehr schöne Bilder ❤
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Hi, liebe Mathilda,
wir haben diese Vögel auch in unser Herz geschlossen. Sie sehen sehr schön aus, finden wir, und haben etwas Witziges.
Danke, dass dir Dinas Fotos gefallen.
Mit lieben Grüßen vom kleinen Dorf am großen Meer
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Witzig mit aufrechtem Gang 😀
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Das macht sie doppelwitzig 🙂
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😊😊
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They can be naughty but funny, too. I once enjoyed the sight of a raven teasing a cat. He hopped about on the ground until he knew the cat was ready to pounce, then he flew on to a nearby branch from which, I swear, he laughed at the cat. Then he made sundry dives at the cat to annoy it, just swiping its tail as he passed over it. This continued for about 30 minutes before the cat gave up and came indoors to sulk for the rest of the day and glare through the patio doors at the bird. He strutted about for a long time enjoying his win. Your photos are delightful and I enjoyed your story.
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Dear Mari,
exactly, they are naughty and funny at the same time. In the literature, we read often about the teasing of cats. They seem to like it very much. Sometimes they do it with dogs as well whereas dogs get crazy.
Thank you very much for liking our post.
Wishing you a wonderful week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Now that’s a funny story, Mari.
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I love the insight into these fascinating birds, and the stellar photography!
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Thanks a lot, dear Dave 🙏 🙏
We are happy that you like our post and especially Hanne-Dina’s photography.
Wishing you all the best, keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Great photo’s of these wonderful birds. The corvid lot are the bosses of the airwaves.
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Thank you very much, dear Fraggle 🙏 🙏
For us, they are beautiful too.
They are the bosses in our garden.
Wishing you all the best, keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I always enjoy an animal story, Fab Four. I can’t count how many times a sooty bird has flown into the house. I had a stainless steel chimney cap placed with a screen that kept the birds out in my last house. It was peaceful for sure. The birds would sit on the cap and sing all day. This house has no chimney. Super post.
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Thanks, dear John 🙏 🙏
They sit on our chimney singing and we hear their song clearly in our living room transported through the chimney. We love it!
Here every house has a chimney. We can’t imagine a house without a chimney.
Keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Yes, a chimney is part of your architecture. Here not so much. 😁
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You are right. When I was in the kindergarten and should draw a house I forgot the chimney. The lady told me a house without a chimney is not a house but a shed.
Chimneys were a very important architectural accessory during Tudor times. Our neighbour has these long nicely ornameted chimneys on his Tudor villa.
Thanks and cheers
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
By the way, it’s still hard for us to imagine a house without a chimney.
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We build a lot of sheds here. In our climate a fireplace is almost useless. We also have heat pumps for air and heat. There is no need for a massive chimney. Some houses have them but I live in a mid century modern designed new house and there isn’t one.
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Even in the Texas climate we like our (two) fireplaces. I agree, there’s not much opportunity to use them, but it’s really cozy when it is!
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You hill country folk have more opportunity to use the fireplaces for sure. We had one at the coast but hardly ever had a fire.
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Agreed!
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As we always lived in the North we can hardly imagine a house without a chimney. We all have central heating for the warmth and an open fire for the romantics.
My neighbour has a heatpump too. Actually he didn’t need a chimney but you wouldn’t believe it he has one. Our house was designed and build by a young architect in the end of the eighties. We have one chimney only what is quite unusual for a house of this size.
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We had a fireplace at the coast which we hardly ever used so it was not a big priority. We do have an electric fire if we ever miss the romance.
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Fab Four of Cley,
Great to see you all and Dina’s pictures too once again. What books are each of you reading lately?
I have nothing against the crows in our area, except when they insist on tearing open someone’s garbage bag before the trash men come around. They sure won’t clean up the mess. Frankly I enjoy watching wildlife in all forms, even when they’re being destructive. I figure we’re the ones living in their territory to begin with.
I hope you have been able to get vaccinated by now and are staying healthy.
GP Cox
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Dear GP,
what our dear Master is reading? He is preparing a post about AI in literature, well, he is interested in AI generally. He finished “Klara and the Sun” by Kazuo Ishiguro. Now he is in the middle of “Machines Like Me” by Ian McEwan. The first book is mass-compatible, elegantly written as one can expect from a Nobel and Booker Prize winner. McEwan’s book is more philosophical and sophisticated. He recommended to us Bookfayries “Otherland” by Tad Williams about animated Avatars, an old novel from 1999 nearly 4000 pages in German. Siri 🙂 has already read most of it and can`t stop. Great narrative.
Jackdaws: We agree with you, we live in their territory.
In about a fortnight we get our second vaccination. Here it was very easy, we were vaccinated village by village. All our neighbours are vaccinated and it works. We have no infections for more than six weeks now in our district and in our county, the infection rate is 16 per 100.000 falling. Everyone sticks to the restrictions. We all are wearing masks when leaving our homes, we keep our distance and wash our hands all the time. Here the people fight to keep up with these restrictions because we don’t want to have another wave.
Are you and your wife vaccinated as well? Anyway, keep healthy, happy and away from people
Thanks for commenting 🙏 🙏 Have a happy week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I do believe I’ve heard of “Machines Like Me.” I should look into finding it! Thank you for responding to my question.
We will be getting our 2nd shot for Covid this Friday, but we are still following the guidelines no matter what!
Thank you for such a wonderful response, my friends from Cley!
GP Cox
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“Machines Like Me” and “Frankissstein” by J. Winterson are the best novels about AI I have read.
Congratulation for being fully vaccinated by the end of this week. That’s reassuring, isn’t it?
Love
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Yes, it is reassuring, Klausbernd. But I do hope people have learned protective hygiene from all this. They tend to forget that all the other diseases are still out there.
Love,
GP Cox
😁👍😀
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Dear GP
let’s hope for the best.
With warm reetings from the cold sea
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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🙋♀️🙋♂️
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” Christian ideology that tends to judge everything black as sinful and negative”
Is that why Catholic priests usually wwer black??!
Please forgive my heretic thoughts, 😀
Pit
P.S.: the British seem to regard them as bringers of luck, don’t they? How else could it be that there’s the belief that the British Empire will not perish as long as there are ravens in the Tower of London? Btw, my opinion is that the British Empire will go under the moment you can no longer order a PINT of beer in a pub, and thanks to Brexit that danger is gone. 😀
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Not sure where you’re getting your info from but ordering a pint in a pub was never in danger while the UK was a member of the EU. The danger now is the high cost of importing many of the beers and lagers that people like (not everyone wants to drink English ales) and this is turning people away from pubs. Drinking at home is fine but the camaraderie of the pub is something special and will be missed.
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Mari, I was only joking! 😉
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Dear Pit,
the Catholic priests are seen here as the gay fools playing carnival as my neighbour calls them ‘the queers with funny hats and costumes’. Their outfit just makes one laugh. It’s different in the reformed church. Luther implemented the black robes there because that was the outfit of the scholars. During the reformation when the first books were printed the ‘swarzen buochen’ (mdh., the black books) were the books of science. That’s another tradition of the colour black. If you are interested you can read this all in my book “Das Geheimnis der Farbe Schwarz”.
Well, the British Empire is gone and since Britain left the EU it became insignificant. So the Brexiters have to drink lots of pints to forget that they delivered the fatal blow to Britain.
By the way, from Monday onwards we are allowed to drink our pints in the beer gardens.
Keep healthy, happy, away from people
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Well, dear Klausbernd, drinking beer in beer gardens is better than nothing, but “beer garden” sounds too German to me and a beer garden can never be an adequate equivalent to (the atmosphere in) a pub.
Take care,
Pit
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Well, the English – at least around here – love their beer gardens, dear Pit. But you are right the serious drinkers have their pints at the bar. Drinking inside at the bar is communication, well, it was. That has changed in our area as most pubs are gastro-pubs and not ‘real’ pubs any more.
Keep well
Klausbernd 🙂
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The conversion to gastro pubs is a real pity!
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It’s a shame!
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Dear Mari,
you are right, the prices of the pints go up and up and the number of people liking English ales and bitter go down. Some friends of ours from Norway visited us a year ago. They noticed that the prices in the pubs and restaurants here are like in Oslo which was seen as one of the most expensive cities in the world. Britain lost not only its ‘Great’ but it also got more dependent on Europe.
Thanks and keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Awww, I enjoy crows and ravens.
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Dear Mitch,
we do as well.
Thanks and cheers
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I’m a big fan of all members of the resourceful crow family., What great images to celebrate them!
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Thanks a lot, dear Margaret 🙏 🙏
Great that you like Dina’s photography.
All the best
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Remove the diminutive-forming l from German Dohle and you can see how close the word is to English daw.
I thought you might mention Poe’s “The Raven.”
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I thought of The Raven too and went straight to look it up as I can no longer remember the whole poem although I once recited it from stage – but I was a schoollgirl then!
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Dear Steve,
there is actually a lot of mentioning of ravens in literature but we have to restrict ourselves. Another reason for not mentioning Poe’s “The Raven” is we couldn’t remember the story any more.
Indeed the word `Dohle´ is the diminutive form of ahd. `taha´ which is seen as onomatopoetic.
Thanks for adding this linguistic aspect
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Here it is: https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/48860/the-raven
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Dear Steve
thank you so much for the link to Poe’s poem. That’s very kind of you!
Keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Enjoyed your post, Fab 4 😊
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Thank you very much, dear Sue.
Wishing you a wonderful rest of the week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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And I you
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Es gibt viel von und über Raben. Da sie mit zu meinen Lieblingsvoegeln gehören habe ich mal ein Buch gehabt, dass voll von Geschichten, Bildern, Glauben etc wsr. Leider habe ich es verliehen und nie wieder bekommen.
Wie habt ihr denn jetzt das Problem mit dem Kamin gelöst?
Liebe Grüße
Ulli
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Liebe Uli,
habe herzlichen Dank für deinen Kommentar.
Das Problem mit dem Kamin hatten wir vor vielen Jahren, als Masterchen noch regelmäßig monatelang auf Lesetouren im Herbst und Frühjahr ging. Es ist seitdem gelöst mit einem Kaminaufsatz aus rostfreien Stahl.
Ja, die Dohlen und alle Krähenvögel sind beliebt in der Literatur, wohl weil sie hoch symbolisch aufgeladen sind, in unserem Kulturbereich schon seit vorchristlich germanischen Zeiten. In der vorchristlichen Kultur wurden die Vögel eher positiv gesehen, da man ihre Schläue bewunderte. Die christliche Ideologie hielt es ja mehr mit den Dummen, die vor den Schlauen Angst hatten und sie deswegen diskriminierten.
Schade, dass dir dein Buch abhanden gekommen ist. “Bücher sind beleidigt, wenn man sie verleiht. Deshalb kehren verleihte Bücher nicht mehr zurück.” sagte Oscar Kokoschka und deswegen halten wir uns strikt daran, unsere Bücher nicht zu beleidigen.
Mit lieben Grüßen vom sonnigen Meer
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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In België hebben we veel last van raven en kraaien in schoorstenen
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Dear Marylu,
nearly everybody has a kind of cap here on their chimneys now. No ravens and crows can block the chimneys any more.
Thanks and have a happy rest of the week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Such a facinating bird 🙂
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Indeed it is, dear June.
Thanks for commenting
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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So has the stork been replaced?
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Dear Anneli,
we are living in a stork-free area. Maybe because it’s too windy here and because they love a drier habitat. On the other hand, they are closely related to herons and we have nearly all birds of the heron family here.
Thanks for your comment.
Warm greetings from the cold sea
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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They (herons and their relatives) are beautiful to watch.
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Indeed, they are. We have lots of herons and egrets here in our salt marshes.
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Very nice for you.
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Ravens are wonderful birds! Unfortunately, many people are unable to notice wisdom coming from the nature!
Greeting from spring Moscow, dear Klaus, Dina & the Fairies!
😊😊😊🌺🌼🌷
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Dear Mary,
maybe it’s their wisdom that made many people afraid of ravens and all the birds of the crow family. In areas of Christian ideology, they were discriminated against because they were birds of Wotan (Odin) and seen as kind of holy in pre-Christian Germanic societies.
Here spring has sprung some weeks ago 🌷🌻🌼🌸🌺🥀 the snowdrops made a place for the daffodils and the tulips 🌷start flowering
With lots of love ❤ ❤ from all of us
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Very interesting!
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🙏 🙏
💃👭🚶♂️
💫✨⚡️✨💫
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😀
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What I like about crows is there intelligence.
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We do as well, dear Cornelia. But that’s why they were discriminated against by the Christians.
Thanks and all the best
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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…ops … their…
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We didn’t notice because it’s a spelling mistake we use to make as well.
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Bei unserem Nachbarn sind die Dohlen auch zugange und ich kann beobachten, wie sie Aststücke in den Kamin fallen lassen. Wir sind offenbar noch verschont geblieben, weil wir abends unseren Kamin immer noch beheizen.
Ich weiß gar nicht wie man sich verhalten soll, wenn man betroffen ist. Da muss wahrscheinlich der Schornsteinfeger ran.
Ein paar Fotos habe ich auch gemacht, aber bei weitem nicht so gelungen wie die von Dina, Gratulation! Liebe Grüße vom verschneiten Niederrhein, unglaublich,
Jürgen
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Lieber Jürgen,
wir hatten uns eine lage Leiter geliehen. Masterchen nahm allen Mut zusammen hinaufzusteigen, um einen Aufsatz aufs Kaminende zu setzen. Wir machten das vor etwa zwanzig Jahren. Es hat bis heute gewirkt. Aber ich denke, ein Schornsteinfeger würde das auch machen.
Prima, dass dir Dinas Fotos gefallen. Hier sind echt viele Dohlen in unserem Garten und auf den Dächern aktiv.
Dank fürs Kommentieren.
Wow, wir lesen ‘verschneiter Niederrhein’ – unglaublich in der Tat! Wir hatten auch auf Schnee gehofft, aber nichts da, stattdessen scheint die Sonne.
Liebe Grüße vom kleinen Dorf am großen Meer
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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A fine post in prose and photography. We have been in our home for seven years now. Each year we have jackdaws nesting in our chimneys.
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Dear Derrick,
don’t you need to do something against the nests in your chimney? We had to be active otherwise we couldn’t light a fire in our fireplace. The nest blocked the draft.
Thanks and keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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We have an open fire, but don’t use it – although the chimney is swept every year 🙂
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We use our open fire often just for the feel of it and therefore we use it regularly at least for six months every year.
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I might well have done the same – but my knees complain too much now. We had the fire put in before the surgery was required 🙂
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We hope your knees are better now. All the best
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Thanks
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Liebe Fabs,
Hier in meiner kleinen Stadt im Teuto gibt es auch Dohlen. Auch Krähen, auch Elstern und Raben, doch die Dohlen sind die Scherzkekse unter den Rabenartigen, eindeutig. Anmutig hupsen sie den Autofahrern ohne die Spur einer Eile vor die Karosse oder begleiten den Fußgänger ein Stück weit, lachen ihn dabei scheinbar aus und sie können so verschmitzt aus der Wäsche schauen, das kann nur eine mit Humor beseelte Dohle so. In der Dämmerung schrauben sie sich mit spitzen Schreien in den Himmel hinauf. Manchmal stehe ich am Fenster in Stock Fünf, lasse mich von diesem hypnotischen Sog mit hochziehen – das können so nur Dohlen und dann mag ich glauben, dass sie Kenntnis haben von einer Magie, die den meisten Menschen verschlossen bleibt, weil ihr Geist zu sehr geerdet ist um mit Dohlen aufzufliegen in einem schwarmschwarzen Schimmern um der aufziehenden Nacht zu huldigen. Jo. So Dohlen eben…😃
Liebste Grüße von Amélie-Fee🧚♀️
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Liebe Amélie-Fee🧚♀️
was für ein toller Kommentar 👍 über den wir uns sehr gefreut haben 🙂 🙂
Wir, und speziell Siri und Selma 👭, finden die Dohlen ebenfalls witzig und lieben sie dafür. Sie sind die Trickster unter den Vögeln, verschmitzt, schlau und witzig.
Wir lasen, dass Menschen im Mittelalter nicht nur Falken als Teil der höfischen Bildung zogen sondern auch Rabenvögel. Ja, dass sie manchen Vogel auch beibrachten zu sprechen. Unsere Dohlen sind jedoch äußerst scheu. Selbst eine Bewegung im Haus am Fenster lässt sie sogleich auffliegen.
Wir bewundern auch ihre soziale Ausrichtung. Sie kommen stets in Gruppen und wenn eine am Birdfeeder (wie heißt denn das in Deutsch?), der am Baum hängt, pickt, lässt sie nicht nur nach kurzer Zeit auch die anderen dran, sondern sie lässt auch immer extra Körner oder Fett für ihre Kollegen, die unter dem Feeder hocken, fallen.
Außerdem finden wir, dass sie sehr schöne Vögel sind, durch ihr dunkel schimmerndes Gefieder.
Wir senden herzallerliebste ❤ ❤ Grüße zurück
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Ja, Dohlen sehen wunderschön aus…🥰…und „bird Feeder“ ist ein Vogelfütterer, doch hier heißen die Dinger Futterstation, wenn sie größer sind, die Fettkörner in den Netzen sind die Meisenknödel und dann gibt es auch noch Meisenringe und halbe gefüllte Kokosnüsse…bird feeder fasst das alles formidable unter einem Dachbegriff zusammen. Sehr praktisch…👍
Und ja, Rabenvögel können zahm werden, sprechen lernen und zeigen ein ausgeprägtes soziales Verhalten…dass sie sogar höfisch abgerichtet wurden, wusste ich noch nicht und auch nicht, dass sie so treu miteinander sind. Sehr sympathische Vögel jedenfalls, die Dohlen.
😃
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Liebe Karfunkelfee
das finden wir auch, sympathisch, kluge, witzige und schöne Vögel, was will man mehr.
Im Mittelalter galt die Abrichtung und somit Zähmung eines Vogels als hohe Stufe der Ausbildung. Einen Falken abzurichten war im 13. Jh. so etwas wie das Abitur. Kennst du das Minnelied des Kürenbergers:
“Ich zoch mir einen valken
mere danne ein jar.
do ich in gezamete
als ich in wolte han
und ich im sin gevidere
mit golde wol bewant”
da ist er ihr entflogen. In diesem berühmten Minnelied aus “Minnesangs Frühling” nutzt der Kürenberger die Abrichtung des Falken als Metapher für die Ausbildung des Liebhabers durch die Frau wie z.B. an dem Minnehof der Eleonora von Aquitanien.
Mit lieben Grüßen vom Meer und vielen Dank
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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P.S.
Das ist früher donauländischer Minnesang wahrscheinlich bereits Mitte des 12. Jh. Der von Kürenberg gilt als einer der ersten Minnesinger. Er ist in der Manessischen Handschrift dokumentiert. Es gibt Abbildungen von ihm reitend neben einer Frau mit einem schwarzen Falken mit goldenen Band auf ihrer Hand.
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Donnerwetter, dieses alte Deutsch hat es aber in sich …das ist fürwahr wie eine andere Sprache…
…und so ein Falke wird zu einem ganz schön schweren Klopper, wenn er so auf deinem Arm hockt und sich unbedingt stundenlang das Genickgefiedere kraulen lassen will, mit schief gelegtem Kopf und Minnesang auf Falkisch fabrizierend. So mir geschehen in Berlebeck Detmold als ich die Adlerwarte besucht habe und einiges über Falknerei zu hören und zu sehen bekam.
Und diesen faszinierenden Falken dabei mal richtig nahe kommen durfte. Aber ich bin ja eine Fee…und habe sowieso ein Herz für allerlei Flattertiere, nur Mücken finde ich garstig…;-)
Lieben Dank für die spannende Erklärung und den donauländischen Minnesang. Da habe ich gleich noch etwas dazu gelernt…👍🧚♀️
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Liebe Karfunkelfee,
das ist mhd. (Mittelhochdeutsch), das ich zu Beginn meines ersten Studiums mit Freuden lernte. Ich liebe nämlich die mhd. Literatur, sowohl die Minnelieder als auch die großen Versepen wie den Parzival, den armen Heinrich und Tristan and Isolde. Wenn man sich mehr damit beschäftigt, ist das mhd. nicht so schwer zu verstehen – naja, die Ausnahme ist Gotfried von Strassburgs “Tristan und Isolde”. Besonders der Beginn ist schwierig zu verstehen.
Ja, die Menschen im Mittelalter waren um einiges stärker als wir. Schon allein unter der Ausrüstung der Ritter wären wir zusammengebrochen. So ein Schwert hätten wir wahrscheinlich nur mit Mühe hochbekommen und dann vor Anstrengung unseren Schild fallen gelassen.
Ich habe einen Freund, der strenger Buddhist ist. Er beendet seine Meditationen stets mit dem Segen für alle fühlenden Wesen – außer den Mücken.
Ganz liebe Grüße vom kleinen Dorf am großen Meer
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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They seem to be minding their own business. Too bad that don’t clean the chimney while they are there.
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Dear Frank,
you are absolutely right! 🙂
Thanks and cheers
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Hallo Ihr lieben,
ja, Krähen, Raben, generell schwarzes Federvieh umgiebt etwas mythisches. Ich mag auch die Amsel Männer 😉
Und ist es nicht der Rabe in den Mythen der Inuit, der eine Schöpferrolle einnimmt!
Liebe schnelle Grüße aus dem Atelier von Susanne
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Liebe Susane,
da hast du recht, der schwarze Rabe ist der Schöpfer der weißen Welt der Inuit.
Hanne-Dina kommuniziert ziemlich gut mit den männlichen Amseln, aber mit den Dohlen geingt es ihr nicht.
Danke und alles Gute.
Vom sonnigen Meer herzliche Grüße
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Lieber Klausbernd,
wir hatten heute wieder eine männliche Amsel zu Besuch, Micha hat wieder ein Stück Garten umgegraben und er war gleich zur Stelle, Würmer zu picken.
Ich habe heute mit einem kleinen Mäuslein kommuniziert, sie sonnte sich auf meinen Teppichvorleger, den ich in die Sonne legte. Putzig war die, schaute mich mit großen Mäuseaugen an. Leider hatte ich nur meine Handykamera zur Hand.
Liebe Grüße von Susanne
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Liebe Susanne,
Mäuslein sind ja total süß.
Wir kommen gerade von einem Spaziergang zurück, um der weißen Eule guten Abend zu sagen, aber sie wollte sich uns nicht zeigen.
Jetzt wird Heilbutt gekocht und hinterher ein Film gesehen. Ich las einige Zeit heute Nachmittag in “Dave” von Raphaela Edelbauer, der tollste und zugleich intellektuellste Roman, den ich seit langem las. Absult clever konzipiert.
Habt eine tolle Woche.
Liebe Grüße von uns an euch
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Lieber Klausbernd,
nun ist deine Nachricht schon eine Woche alt und ich habe in dieser verrückten, arbeitsreichen letzten Woche nicht geschafft, zu antworten.
Danke für den Buch Tipp, ich habe Dave auf meine Liste gesetzt, es hört sich sehr interessant an.
Wir werden trotz schlechtem Wetter gleich in den Garten “stürmen”, wir haben gestern einige Pflanzen gekauft, die eingesetzt werden wollen.
Einen schönen Sonntag von Susanne
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Guten Morgen, liebe Susanne,
gestern habe ich den ganzen Tag in knalle Sonne im Garten verbracht. Ich habe akriebisch unser Kräuterbeet anmutig wie in einem Klostergarten ‘gestylt’. Alle Kräuter wurden fein beschnitten. Das war eine meditative Arbeit, bei der mir in den Sinn kam, es wäre doch ideal, sich im Sommer dem Garten hinzugeben und im Winter zu philosophieren. Das wäre so etwa wie Marx in seinen Frühschriften den unentfemdeten Menschen beschreibt.
Ich habe vor zwei Tagen “Dave” ausgelesen. Es ist nach wie vor das Buch, das mich am meisten in letzter Zeit fasziniert hat. Die Autorin ist erfreulich belesen, was mir gut gefällt, und die vielen Sachinformationen sind elegant in eine Story verpackt. Ich weiß nicht, ob du “Otherland” von Tad Williams kennst, daran hat mich ‘Dave’ vage erinnert. Ich werde wohl auch den Vorgänger lesen.
In den letzten Nächten hatten wir Frost, aber die gelber Tulpen im Garten, ich weiß gar nicht, warum wir nur gelbe aben, haben das bestens überstanden. Es gab einen tollen Sternenhimmel mit Milchstraße über unserem Haus.
Heute müsste ich irgendetwas Kluges zur KI schreiben, aber naja, es ist ja Sonntag …
Auch euch wünschen wir einen wunderschönen Sonntag
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Lieber Klausbernd,
nach der Inspiratio durch Dave schreibst du bestimmt sehr anregend über KI’s. Kennst du von Heinlein “The moon is a harsh Mistress”? Es ist eines meiner Lieblingsbücher von Heinlein ( neben Lazarus Long) 😉
“Die Rolle des Erzählers im Buch übernimmt Manuel Garcia O’Kelly „Mannie“ Davis. Der einarmige Computertechniker entdeckt, dass das primäre Computersystem der Lunar Authority (der Verwaltungsbehörde auf dem Mond) ein eigenes Bewusstsein entwickelt hat und zu einer künstlichen Intelligenz geworden ist. ” So steht es in Wikipedia und es gibt es gut wieder.
Davis und Dave 😉
Ich habe bis eben Stauden gepflanzt. Die hatte ich schon ganz vergessen, sie lagen im Schuppen und warteten auf mich. Eben hat sogar ein wenig die Sonne geschienen und die aufgewühlte Erde schaut verheißungsvoll aus.
Gleich werde ich mich weiter dem Buch “Die Farbe der Wahrheit, Dokumentarismen im Kunstfeld” von Hito Steyerl zuwenden. 🙂 Sehr interessant.
Liebe Grüße und einen wundervollen Sonntagnachmittag an euch vier von Susanne
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Guten Morgen, liebe Susanne,
Danke für den Tip mit Heinleins Roman. Ich kenne den leider nicht. Wir haben das Buch auch nicht in unserer Bibliothek. Da muss ich unbedingt reingucken. Ich las von Heinlein “Citicen of the Galaxy” und “Stranger in a Strange Land”, kann mich aber kein Bisschen mehr erinnern.
Gleich werde ich mich nun daran machen, einen Entwurf zu AI zu schreiben. Ich werde das ausführlich und genau machen, da es neben einer Blogpost auch ein Podcast und evtl. eine Sendung werden soll.
Ich lese gerade den aktuellen englschen Bestseller “The Smallest Man” von F. Quinn, eine nett unterhaltsame Plauderei. Es ist geeignet als Bettlektüre, angenehm zu lesen und gut geschrieben.
Eine rundum wunderbare Woche wünsche ich dir
Klausbernd 🙂
und der Rest der Rasselbande
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Lieber Klausbernd,
mein Bruder und ich hatten alle Heinleinbücher, sie stehen inzwischen bei meinem Bruder im Regal. Er hat einfach noch mehr Platz und wenn ich eines der Bücher lesen möchte, dann hole ich es mir von ihm ab und danach wandert es wieder in sein Regal.
Ich habe gerade einen Überblick über den Inhalt von “Dem Archiv verschrieben” von Derrida verschafft und überlege gerade, ob Gedanken aus dem Buch in meine Promotion passen.
Auf jeden Fall nehme ich erstmal ein Abstrakt in meine Kartei auf.
Grüße an die ganze Rasselbande, Susanne
P.S. Bin schon neugierig auf den KI Artikel.
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Is there a season or time of year they are more prevalent? We have woodpeckers that like the eves
of the house in the early spring, can’t really stop them, they just are so and so’s!
Nature gives us plenty to concern ourselves with, on a regular bases. Good fortune!
love you guys, Eddie
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Dear Eddy,
they are around all the year, but we see more jackdaws in spring and summer than during the winter.
We have woodpeckers (the green woodpecker) in our garden as well mostly in spring.
Thanks for commenting.
With love from the little village next to the big sea
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I’m not sure if there is a difference between ravens, crows and jackdaws but here in our world most of us know that crows and ravens are among the most intelligent species of birds/animals. I’ve read quite a bit about research on them, how they use tools (one of the major signs of intelligence) and how they communicate with each other. Sorry they messed up your chimney though!! As always the images are absolutely perfect!
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Dear Tina,
crows, ravens and jackdaws belong to the same family and they are all quite intelligent, well, modern research found out that they are more intelligent than dolphins. They can use tools and learn to speak and they are very social.
With the chimney that wasn’t a big deal. Now it has a cap and everything is fine.
Thanks for liking Dina’s photography.
All the best.
Keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Great photographs, and thanks for helping people get straight on our wonderful black bird species!
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Thank you very much for liking Dina’s pictures 🙏 🙏 and for commenting.
Have a happy day
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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These birds may be intelligent but men is intelligent enough to counter there behaviour 🙂
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Well, they are not more intelligent than humans – at least we think we are the most intelligent species. Of course, the problem is how to define intelligence.
Tanks and cheers
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Bei dir ist ja echt was los! Aber kein Wunder – toll geschrieben und die Fotos dazu sind einfach gestochen scharf.
Ich mag diese Vögel auch sehr. Ihre Intelligenz ist bezeichnend. Und die Liebe in ihrer Ehe hält ein Leben lang.
Also, ich lese mich erst einmal ein wenig weiter in deinem Blog. Mir gefällt es hier sehr gut.
Liebe Grüße, Edith
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Habe herzlichen ❤ Dank, liebe Edith,
toll, dass dir unser Blog gefällt. Darüber freuen wir uns.
Ja, die Dohlen sind klug, witzig und sehr sozial. Sie treten stes in Gruppen auf.
Viel Spaß beim Lesen unserer Blogposts 🙂
Ganz liebe Grüße
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Ich bleibe auf jeden Fall euer Lesegast 🙂
Herzlichst, Edith
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Na, PRIMA!
Viel Vergnügen 🙂
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Reblogged this on Janet's Thread 2.
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Dear Janet,
thanks for reblogging 🙏 🙏 We feel honoured.
All the best.
Keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Das sind wunderschöne Vögel! Freunde von uns hatten eine Dohle in der Nachbarschaft die recht zahm war, über der Jahre entwickelte sich eine innige Beziehung.
Liebe Grüße
U+H
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Liebe Ursel,
speziell im Mittelalter und der Frühneuzeit zähmte man Dohlen und brachte ihnen auch Sprechen bei. Sie wurden als Haustiere gehalten.
Mit ganz lieben ❤ Grüßen vom Meer nach Frankfurt
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Good to read from you again, dear friends. I can well remember many years ago when this disaster with your chimney happened and your handsome neighbour helped out with a cherry-picker. You have so many magnificent old houses with several open fireplaces in England. I find the chimneys fascinating and I especially like the ones in Holkham village. I can’t remember if there were any jackdaws up their roofs, though.
I wonder if any jackdaws appear in the WWI novel “Jackdaws” by Ken Follett. This quote is from the book, I quite like it;
“When people are perfectly polite, it usually means they don’t really care. A little awkwardness is more sincere.”
Good luck with the opening after lockdown on Monday! You are doing well in England now. Have you all had your second jab? Does fairies need a jab too?
Take care.
KRAM
Annalena Xx
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Good afternoon, our dear friend Annalena,
we like this Follett quote, that’s so true, isn’t it? We got some of the early Follett books (because we once met him through a friend of ours) but we don’t like them. The style is horrible and his playing with the expectations of the reader is boring as his action and building up tension is. Nevertheless, he is quite successful. We don’t know his novel “Jackdaws”.
Holkham village has the nicest sets of Tudor chimneys. In former times every room had an open fireplace and every fireplace had its own chimney. A beautiful chimney meant prestige during the time of Henry VIII.
We’ll get our second jab in a fortnight. No, fairies don’t need to be vaccinated. They are immune against Covid19.
With lots of love
KRAM
🤗 🤗 🤗 🤗
Keep well, healthy and happy
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Hi my dear “Fab4”,
thank you for a really very interesting post. My garden is a playground for the magpies. Their aim is to steal the eggs and little birds out of their nests.
Nature can be brutal. As you can imagine magpies are not my favourite birds.
All the best for your second shot on Friday.
Talk to you soon
🙏🇮🇪🌈🦋🧚🏻🧚🏻
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Dear Joan,
we are not sure but we suppose that the jackdaws don’t steal the eggs of the little birds. Most of the time we see them on the ground in our garden, well, as you know Hanne-Dina over-feeds them. Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma say she makes too heavy to fly away.
We’ll have our second jab in a fortnight. Have you had your vaccination? Vaccination seems to be kind of chaotic in Germany. Here it was dead easy. We got a phone call and went.
All the best to you. Keep well and take care.
Love ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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A friend sent me a saying the other day: “Be the crow you want to see in the world!! Collect shiny things, hop happily down the street for no apparent reason, scream loudly when you see your friends.”
I have come back to this post several times to reread your thoughts on Jackdaws and enjoy the most excellent conversations that follow. I feel an affinity to crows and black birds that has grown over the years since I have studied their behavior. I have often wondered if we are the most advanced creatures to walk this earth. Crows have a social structure, a language and are not afraid to express their opinions, but yet they are family. Every evening around dusk, I look out my window to watch the crows gather and fly towards the east. At first there are only a few; then they come in random patterns that grow in strength. It is always the same. There is a symmetry and dignified elegance to their flight, which is rooted in the inevitability of a long-standing tradition. Crows are returning to their roost. Since the 1970’s, an estimated 3,000 – 6,000 crows share a dusk-to-dawn abode that covers the area of about two city blocks in Burnaby, British Columbia. Forty years ago, trees were more plentiful, but the crows pay no mind to the urban sprawl that has reduced the foliage. This is their place and their numbers do not diminish. When I watch their interactions, I am reminded by our need for community and belonging. We seek the company of those we love and feel a kindred bond. Just as the crows gather in the fading light of early evening, we look forward to the shelter and safety of homecoming. Sending many hugs and lots of love to my dear friends, the Fab Four of Cley.
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Good afternoon, dear Rebecca,
speaking about intelligence and being advanced is always a problem in how we define it. When I was a student, quite a lot of scientist ask what is intelligence f.e. They came up with different kinds of intelligence but in the end, most of the scientists could agree with the clever answer ‘intelligence is what an intelligence test is measuring’. And what is advanced? Advanced concerning to what?
It is amazing how easily those birds adapted to a changing surrounding. By the way, we see that as intelligence as well as their social skills.
As your friend noticed, they seem to be happy with what there is. They are survivors. In comparison to other birds, the birds of the crow and raven family are not endangered.
Thank you very much, our dear friend, for commenting.
Hugs and love
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Hello to you all in Cley!
A fascinating post and photos! The first one is almost eerie as I feel the Jackdaw looking straight into my soul! It does seem intelligent, weighing up the options, contemplating its life! The birds seem to have been much maligned during their existence, although The Birds didn’t help! It was interesting to learn some other stories about them and I’m all with Siri and Selma for an adapted happy ending in Hans Huckebein. Sometimes I’ve rewritten an ending to books in my head which become so true that when I come to read the book again I’m astonished at the ‘wrong’ finale! 😀 I hope you got the fire working safely!
Wishing you all a wonderful rest of the week and enjoy the amazing landscape near to you!
Annika
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Dear Annika,
yes, the problem with our fireplace was easily solved by a kind of cap we put on our chimney. Thank you, we just had a nice fire going last night.
Funny you write about rewriting stories in your imagination and then you are astonished about ‘the wrong end’. Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma do that all the time. One could see that as a new genre of rewritten stories. Unfortunately, our dear Bookfayries never write down their new versions of the stories. Did you?
Thanks for commenting. Have a happy rest of the week and enjoy life, stay healthy, happy and cool 😉
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I was thinking these looked like crows–and then you mentioned the family. OK, agreed. We have huge flocks of them that fly over my neighborhood, resting at different places at specific times of the day. They visit me late afternoon–4 pm ish. They take over the trees! Didn’t know they mate for life–and 20 years! That’s something to admire.
Love “But our Bookfayries wished him a happy end, therefore they rewrote this story”–kudos!
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Thank you very much, dear Jacqui.
At ours, they are around all day long and in the evening they disappear in the few high trees around here or their chimneys. Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma think the chimneys are their luxurious homes, the best residential area.
Wishing you a wonderful weekend
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Hehee. I like that thought–the luxury homes.
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And actually, these birds are even more privileged living in one of the biggest bird sanctuaries in Britain. They must have build up a great karma 😉
Thanks and love
Klausbernd 🙂
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Fantastic series.
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Thank you very much 🙏 🙏
Wishing you a happy Sunday
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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We had a bird-woodstove situation as well this week. A starling fell through the chimney pipe into our wood stove (thankfully no longer hot). It was covered with ashes and would have flown into our living room if we tried to catch it with our hands. So we found a box that fit the opening of the stove, with a little hole to shine a flashlight through (to attract the bird to the light), set up a small bowl of food inside the box and waited until we heard the bird pecking on the food. That’s when we dropped a flat piece of cardboard between the stove opening and the cardboard box and trapped the bird. Success! Carried the box outside and released the ash-covered bird who had not suffered any injuries and seemed happy to fly off to freedom.
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Absolutely clever, we are impressed.
Neighbours told us that they sometimes have birds blown down into one of their chimneys. They reckon that happens when we have high winds.
Thank you very much for your comment 🙏 🙏
Wishing you a wonderful week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Test, test, test, pip, pip, pip…
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👏🏻👏🏻✨💫🍾🎯🍀 Cley to Odenwald “message received, we can read you!” 👏🏻👏🏻✨💫🍾🎯💪🏻
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Hey, da bin ich wieder! Kräh, kräh, kräh….Technik überlistet!!! Es war wahrscheinlich eine innere Blockade…aber jetzt habe ich die Domain: allesfuergluecklichekinder.com, muss jetzt nur noch mit Inhalten gefüllt werden….
Sende herzliche Grüße nach Cley zu den fab4
Gerade kam die Rechnung, ich bin jetzt stolzer Besitzer – wie großartig!!!
Ja es gibt viele komische Vögel
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Aaaah, liebe Pia,
wir freuen uns wie dolle dich wieder hier zu sehen. 🥰 Wir haben dich sehr vermisst! Gratuliere zu deinem 💃🏼 Account!👏🏻🎯🍾🌟 So wie wir dich und deine Kreativität kennen, wirst du etwas Grossartiges daraus machen. Du kommst gerade rechtzeitig zum Frühlingsbeginn, bist sozusagen mit den Schwalben angekommen.
Pip, pip, pip, pip von uns und den Vögeln
🙋🏼♀️🧚🏻♀️🧚🏻🙋🏼♂️
The Fab Four of Cley 🌊
🤗🤗🤗🤗
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Liebste Dina, Danke!!! Ja, da wird was draus! Das erste Projekt ist ein Webinar für Erzieher bei der Didacta für den Beltz Verlag…
Bitte drückt mir die Daumen, damit ich kameratechnisch, optisch, verbal und überhaupt die “ErzieherInnen” und Lesefreunde guter Kinderbücher erreichen werde !
Das wäre wirklich schön!
Drei Kinderbücher soll ich vorstellen, dazu kreative Ideen, die über das Lesen hinaus gehen – um den Kitas zu helfen. Das mache ich doch gerne!
Ich könnte mir eine Handpuppe basteln oder ein Kind als Begleitvogel verkleiden, so ähnlich wie bei Rabe Rudi. Den kleinen Rabe Socke haben meine Kinder auch sehr geliebt…
Schwalben liebe ich!
Schöne Woche euch!
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Bin auch sehr froh, dass ich jetzt endlich nochmal versucht habe, ob wordpress mit meinen verschiedenen Mail-Adressen klar kommt. Zwischendurch war ich verzweifelt, es hatte einfach nicht geklappt mich anzumelden.
Dis – Tanzen hat mir einen ordentlichen Förderbetrag zugesagt, viele kreative Projekte wurden bewilligt, auch Luftfilteranlagen etc. “Tanzgarten Ludwigshafen” und Auftritte im Ebertpark, das wird alles klappen! Heute ist der Fördervertrag eingetroffen…die Kinder sind glücklich, das Tanzen ist ein Lichtblick, ich bin völlig entspannt!
Bei der Didacta werde ich für den Beltz Verlag ein Webinar geben. Für Erzieher. Darauf freue ich mich sehr!
Prüfung zur Ernährungsberaterin nach TCM ist am 17.10., oje, da muss ich noch büffeln!
So, 24 Tage sind nach wie vor etwas kurz….Guuuuuute Nacht!
Uns hat früher der Kleine Rabe Socke extrem gut gefallen und natürlich die Kindersendung Rabe Rudi!
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SUPER, liebe Pia, dass wir dich wieder bei uns haben. Echt, du hast uns gefehlt.
Ganz liebe Grüße
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Habe jetzt einen Kochkamin im Odenwald! Endlich!
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Cool, gratuliere, liebe Pia! 👍🏻 Bitte schön abdecken …
😘
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Liebe Pia
Ja PRIMA! Pass auf, dass keine Dohle dort einzieht 😉
Ganz liebe Grüße
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Gerade die Dohlen mag ich wirklich sehr. Ich finde, es sind die Kobolde unter den Krähenvögeln. Gegenüber meinem Elternhaus ist ein Neubau errichtet worden und dort sind ebenfalls gleich am Kamin die Krähen zugange, sich ein Nest zu errichten. Vielleicht ist es auch der Ausblick, den sie in diesen Höhen haben und nicht allein die Kaminwärme, die sie unwiderstehlich anziehen.
Habt lieben Dank für die schönen Fotos und die Geschichte dazu.
Frische Grüße aus einem frostigen Ruhrgebiet.
Vera
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Guten Morgen, liebe Vera,
schön ausgedrückt, dass Dohlen die Kobolde der Krähenvögel sind. Passt prima!
Danke für deinen Kommentar 🙏 🙏
Alles Gute, liebe Grüße vom sonnigen Meer ins Ruhrgebiet
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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They are beautiful birds, especially with those blue eyes. Birds in the Corvid family are quite intelligent.
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Good morning, dear Lavinia,
we love these birds. We read some scientific papers saying that the birds of the Corvid family belong to the group of the most intelligent animals.
Thanks for commenting 🙏 🙏
All the best
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I never understood the bad rep that crows and ravens often are associated with. As you point out they are very intelligent birds. Of course, no one wants them in the chimney. As a matter of fact I have had the jackdaws’ cousins, the magpies, come all the way down a chimney, ending in the stove, a couple of times. Maybe not a sign of their smartness…
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Dear Otto,
the Christian ideology tried to demonise everything black because like most monotheist religions it’s a light cult with roots in the Persian light mystery cults (Zoroaster f.e.). Another reason to demonise the birds from the Corvid family was their close connection to the competing Germanic mythology as Wotan’s birds Hugin and Munin.
Magpies coming down your chimney. Well, you must have quite an attractive chimney for these birds 😉
Thanks for commenting 🙏 🙏
All the best
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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I can’t remember hearing the name ‘jackdaw’ for a bird, and the name itself raised a number of interesting associations for me: jack knife, jackleg, jacked-up. Exploring the meanings for some of those terms was as interesting as your tale of the jackdaw, and as pleasing as Dina’s photos. I thoroughly enjoyed the post.
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Dear Linda,
thanks for making us look into the etymology of the word ‘jackdaw’. The word was not used before the 16th c. It probably goes back to the old English word ‘jack’ as a diminutive. The ancient English word ‘daw’ was used before the 16th c. to name the jackdaw.
All the best
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Very interesting post thank you for sharing it.
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Thank you very much, dear Charlotte,
on our lawn, was a conference of jackdaws this afternoon when we replaced a rose. Did they complain about this post?
Wishing you all the best, keep well
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Beautiful bird photos, especially Crow, that I like to see. However, they have the potential to be mischievous! Fantastic images!
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Thank you.
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Wonderful shots of those crows.
The photo with the crow looking down in the chminey is my favorite.
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Thank you very much, dear Jan.
Siri 🙂 and 🙂 Selma like it most as well. The jackdaw seems to ask “Is there anybody in there?”
We wish you a wonderful week ahead
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Your jackdaws are a bit like our grackles but they leave our chimneys alone and prefer their nests in trees. Love to minimalist look of your photos!
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Thank you VERY much for commenting.
We had never heard of grackles before but had a look at them in our bird books. Indeed, although they are a different family they are quite similar in looks and behaviour.
We love a minimalist aesthetic – in our house, on our blog.
Wishing you a wonderful week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Wonderful photos and prose! I am endlessly fascinated by the ravens that we have on our mountains of Vancouver. Their shiny feathers are blacker than black, their beaks are enormous and they seem to stare you down when they’re curious. They also soar beautifully. I can understand why they figure prominently in the stories/art of Indigenous Peoples of the West Coast of North America—Hans Huckebein likely would have been reincarnated or shape-shifted into a different creature had the story been created by them.
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Good afternoon, dear Caroline,
great that you like our post, thank you!
The raven family is very important and dominant in the mythology and many tales of the Inuit. These birds bring not only light but also practise magic because they are so intelligent and help to understand oneself.
They visit our garden every day and we don’t mind. They always come in groups and we feed them. But one has to separate feeding places for the songbirds and the jackdaws otherwise the jackdaws eat everything.
Thanks for commenting. Wishing you a happy week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Love the photos and enjoyed taking a look at these birds in their own world. I used to live in Latvia where I had a big garden, There was a spot where we would put out food and scraps for small and big birds, We had two large crows that came to visit every day. With time they got less afraid and soon they got demaninf, When nothing was put out for the day a large crow would sit on the garden fence and caw at me like Come on, Come on, where’s the food? And it would not fly away until I had put out food and then I guess it left to give the world that food was served,
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Dear Rasma,
thank you VERY much for sharing your crow experience. We experienced something similar. The jackdaws pecked on our window pane when there was no food for them.
Wishing you a wonderful weekend
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Oh ja, die Geschichte von Hans Huckebein liebe ich sehr. Ich mag die Geschichten von Wilhelm Busch, egal wie böse sie sind. Der Maulwurf kommt ja bei ihm zum Beispiel auch nicht gut weg… Ich wohne übrigens ganz in der Nähe von Wilhelm Buschs Geburtshaus. 😀
Liebe Wochenendgrüße
Nicole
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Liebe Nicole,
wir mussten erst einmal nachschauen, wo Busch geboren wurde. Nun wissen wir, dass es bei Hanover war.
Wir lieben auch Wilhelm Buschs Geschichten und haben sie als Kinder immer wieder gelesen. Später fanden wir dann heraus, dass Busch der wohl einzige Freund Schopenhauers war, den er auch mit seinem Pudel gezeichnet hat.
Vielen Dank für deinen Kommentar.
Wir wünschen dir eine wunderschöne Woche
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Wow, great series! The clarity of these bird photos are incredible.
Thank you, FFC!
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Thank you very much, dear Amy.
Wishing you a happy and healthy week
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Thank you for speaking up for the Corvid family. We were just listening to a Raven this morning – they have amazing vocalizations. We have great respect for them, the crows, and all members of the Corvis family. 🙂
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Dear Lynn,
we read that people taught birds from the Corvid family to kind of talk. Especially in the late middle ages, people kept ravens as domestic animals.
Thanks for commenting.
Keep well and happy
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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They’re fascinating….there is a professor here (well, near here) at the University of Washington (John Marzluff) who has done ground-breaking work with crows. He showed that they can recognize individual human faces and then they can teach other crows about them. This cultural transmission of information went from crow to crow AND was taught to new generations of crows. If you google him you can find a TEDx talk and other videos where he explains his work.
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Thank you very much, dear Lynn 🙏 🙏
during the middle ages, the nobility had falcons and the ‘normal’ folk had members of the Corvis family they had tamed. They lived together with these birds and talked to them. At least they projected that the birds could understand them. To train a raven f.e. was part of the education of a young person – mostly men.
Thanks for this link. Interesting, indeed!
Wishing you a wonderful weekend
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Am Anfang dieses Posts wurde ich hellhörig. Diese schwarzen Vögel bilden 20 Jahre ein Paar. Wir hatten einen Nachbarjungen, der gerne Vögeln Leid antat. Das Nest der Schwalben an unserem Haus hat er mit seiner Schleuder zerschossen. Vielleicht hat er Ähnliches mit einem bestimmten Dohlenpaar gemacht. Viele Jahre lang, der Sohn war längst erwachsen und ausgezogen, attackierten zwei Raben von einer Seite her im ersten Stock das Fenster dieses Hauses. Davon waren sie nicht abzubringen. Die Nachbarn versuchten es mit bunten Wimpeln und Windrädern. Keine Chance. Es muss wohl erst aufgehört haben, als dieses Paar im Vogelhimmel war.
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Hi,
Lynn berichtet im gewissen Sinne Ähnliches (im letzten Kommenar), dass nämlich Vögel der Rabengruppe sich an Menschen erinnern können und sogar diese Information weitergeben können. Dennoch finde ich es sehr erstaunlich, was du da berichtest. Es zeigt, wie klug diese Vögel sind.
Odin, der germanische Gott der Weisheit (Lieder Edda), hatte zwei Raben Hugin und Munin, die ausflogen und ihn berichteten, was in der Welt geschieht. Sie symbolisieren den Gedanken und das Gedächtnis.
Habe herzlichen Dank für deinen Kommentar. Wir wünschen ein höchst angenehmes Wochenende
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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Stunning, and deeply moving. I have an affinity for working with birds. A few years back, well probably almost 20 years now, I worked with hawks. Totally adored working with them and to this day I still miss handling them. I always felt the energy of each raptor for some reason – I was, and still remain to be totally addicted to them. In the US, we call it “a rush.” It sure is. Dr. Deb
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Dina is addicted to birds as well.
But rather to the small birds like blackbirds, robins, woodpeckers, thrushes, wrens and other songbirds. We had tame pheasants in our garden. They came and sat on Dina’s lap when we were sitting in our garden.
Thanks for commenting
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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That jackdaws like to live in chimneys is used in Maggie O`Farrells highly praised novel “Hamnet”. There is rustling in the chimney and Mary says: “It’s likely nothing more than a jackdaw come down the chimney” (p. 307)
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It is a very valuable post!
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Thank you very much
The Fab Four of Cley
🙂 🙂 🙂 🙂
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