No one:
Absolutely no one:
Literally not a single soul on this Earth:
Me: December 24th. 9 PM. Eastern Standard Time. From here on in I shoot without a script. See if anything comes of it, instead of my old shit. First shot, Roger. Tuning the Fender guitar he hasn’t played in a year. This won’t tune. So we hear. He’s just coming back from half a year of withdrawal. Are you talking to me? Not at all! Are you ready? Hold that focus, steady. Tell the folks at home, what you’re doing Roger. . .
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was abt to sleep but i just realized that not only satosugu shares the same death anniversary bc haha lo and behold, megumi fushigover enters the scene. you hear that? both my husband and son and other husband shares the SAME death day. i can't fucking take this anymore just pls, someone in that tv room, FUCKING INTERVENE IDC JUST DO SOMETHING
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Mistle Thrush (Turdus viscivorus)
Family: Thrush Family (Turdidae)
IUCN Conservation Status: Least Concern
Found in northern Africa, temperate regions of Asia and almost all of Europe, the Mistle Thrush is named for the mutualistic relationship it exhibits with various species of mistletoe (a group of parasitic plants in the genus Viscum that rely on birds to spread between hosts.) During the winter, when other sources of food are scarce, mistletoes bare fruits which Mistle Thrushes heavily rely on to avoid starvation, and after the soft, nutritious flesh of the fruits have been digested the seeds remain inside a sticky membrane made up of a material known as viscin. When the seeds exit the Mistle Thrush’s body in its droppings the viscin allows them to stick to the branches of trees, with the mistletoe’s roots then growing into the tree and extracting nutrients from it to allow it to grow into a mature, fruit-baring plant. Mistle Thrushes inhabit a wide range of wooded habitats (including both natural habitats such as woodlands and human-made environments such as orchards) and generally live alone or in pairs (with individuals who have found mates often remaining with their partners for their entire lives.) When food is abundant during the spring and summer this species has a varied diet consisting of a wide range of seeds, fruits, insects, spiders, snails and slugs, and during the winter individuals or pairs will claim a small number of fruit-bearing plants (typically mistletoe, but in areas where mistletoe is not present they may also claim other trees that bare fruit in the winter, such as European Holly) as their territory, aggressively chasing off any other birds that come near their tree in order to ensure that they are never without food. Mistle Thrushes are also highly territorial during their breeding season (which lasts from early February to late May), with males fiercely guarding the area surrounding their nest from other animals, including potential predators such as owls, hawks, eagles, crows and cats (as well as species several times their size, such as Golden Eagles and even Humans.) Female Mistle Thrushes construct large, bowl-shaped nests out of sticks, grass and moss and line them with mud and leaves, after which they produce a clutch of 3-5 blue-and-brown eggs which hatch 12-15 days later, and while chicks are helpless at birth they develop rapidly and can fly at only around 14-16 days old.
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Animal Advent Calendar - Day 24
Image Source: https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/12735-Turdus-viscivorus
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Have a great Christmas eve everyone!
Happy 24th of DEPPcember!
(Johnny Depp) (24/31)
(From Hell) [2001]
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