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Old 04-02-2016, 07:44 AM   #2
Snakeadelic
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Join Date: May 2015
Posts: 660
The variety of forms feathers have taken to serve their assorted purposes truly is astonishing Since my inner child is not a child but is in fact half packrat and half magpie, I'm drawn to shiny things and compelled to hoard them, so of course I collect up most of the feathers I find hanging around without a bird attached.

I have magpie wing and tail feathers, including a magnificent magpie center tail feather (the longest) brought to me by a friend who found it while walking their dog. I have two flicker (woodpecker) feathers, which are distinctive because the center shaft of the feathers is bright red-orange and that color appears to spread into the vanes (the individual "fibers" that attach to the center shaft) like watercolor pigment on wet paper. I have feathers from an (invasive) Eurasian collared dove that was taken by a hawk right in front of my mailbox last year.

The only feathers I do NOT pick up are anything I'm sure came from a hawk, owl, or other bird of prey. Not sure how Montana feels about it, but some years back I read the woeful tale of an Alaska artist whose body of work was confiscated by the Feds and who was charged many thousands in financial penalties. The problem? Eagle feathers. Her property had many predator-bird nests, and she was very careful to only collect shed feathers after nestlings had flown. However, because she was not Native American, she was told it is federally illegal to disturb even a shed feather from a hawk, eagle, falcon, or owl.

Only a couple of times have I found feathers I was sure came from a predator; once a red-tailed hawk secondary wing feather and a couple of times I found big flight feathers with the telltale serration on the leading edge that says (around here) barn or great horned owl. I might leave flights from our garbage-sucking invasive vermin (starlings and European house sparrows, which together have driven out everything smaller than a starling) but anything else I yoink right up. One of the prizes of my collection is from western Oregon, a striped tail feather from a Steller's jay--like the starling, a vivid bird largely without pigmentation in the feathers. For those unfamiliar with Steller's jays, they're shaped like blue jays including the jaunty pointed crest, but are much less colorful--black head and neck, sometimes with minor white markings on the face, and vivid blue body with blue-on-blue striping on the wings and tail.
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