I can’t wait to learn to ride my unicycle. I am looking forward to all the wackey experience that all of y’all have. Running over things. (Thump) There’s Jimmy Hoffa! Then another post said people will serenade me with circus songs. Good times! That should help cure the boredom.
No, I have ly legs to go away fast, and if I really had a problem, it would receive a quick in the head, or a heavy steel uni. But I would probably get injured. So my favourite option is to keep my distances with dogs, and to just go away if they starg being dumb.
Yeah, it was already dead. It was the back from it . I stopped before I roll over the snake with my wheel. It was 250 km from my home, I was on a shirt weekend trip with my Muni.
I’ve nearly hit a few of those kamikaze squirrels, but luckily haven’t run one over yet. There was also a bird on the side of the sidewalk and as I passed it it jumped out and skittered across in front of me. By some magic I managed to slow down enough and swerve so as not to hit it(might have actually run over the edge of a feather but nothing serious I don’t think). I don’t know why it didn’t just fly away before I got too close. I’ve also half run over a friends uni when he upds ahead of me and I don’t have time to dismount before half running over his uni.
It reminds a weird encounter I made 2 months ago. It’s off-topic, but well.
I was on a walk with a friend and a magpie landed on a stone wall just next to us. We stopped and looked at it, and it was doing the same. It was very close, less than 50cm from us. After looking at each other for a while, I took a picture.
The beautiful bird didn’t fly away, so I tried to pet him gently on the head (yeah, I know, I shouldn’t do that).
The magpie didn’t seem to like that and, lightning-fast, pinched and maintained a bit my finger in its beak before releasing me.
Then it probably silently judged me, and then only after a while, flew away.
@Unigoof, was your’s a Pigeon? They can be dossle like that. Otherwise, the only probable explanation for both birds behavior is a person may have hand raised them.
It was a robin. It was also too early in the year to be a baby or a mother full of eggs, so perhaps hand raised or maybe just tired? It was getting dark out and maybe didn’t see me and was tired.
Those seem to be somewhat universal corvid behaviors. They’re opportunistic predators. They’re not really good at it like a hawk or an owl, but if there’s a nest to raid they’ll take advantage of it.