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authorluxagraf <sng@luxagraf>2021-02-19 21:01:35 -0500
committerluxagraf <sng@luxagraf>2021-02-19 21:01:35 -0500
commit4df6d9a200b257f7e7c00ce4a8f25fcf26fe26ea (patch)
treeeae41aa5161b0bf59bce7b595eda4e1077b7b64d /dialogues/american-redstart.txt
parenta07299145df46ce39be5bff285a03354b6f4a207 (diff)
condensed dialogues to single text file
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-<img src="images/2018/redstart1.jpg" id="image-1528" class="picwide" />
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-American redstart is one of those head scratching names. For whatever reason, it's not called a warbler. Nevertheless, despite the name, it is a warbler, not, as the name would lead you to expect, a relative of old world redstarts. In fact, it has nothing whatsoever to do with old world redstarts. Not the only poorly named bird to be sure -- a red breasted woodpecker does not have a red breast, magnolia warblers almost never go near magnolia trees, etc, etc.
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-<img src="images/2018/redstart2.jpg" id="image-1529" class="picwide" />
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-Redstarts are fun birds to watch. They love to flutter, tail spread, wings seemingly in slow motion, they hover and chase after insects. They almost look more like oversized butterflies than birds. Even the coloring is reminiscent of a monarch. They tend to move more like flycatchers than warblers, which tend to hop and bounce around, rather than flutter and hover like redstarts.
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