Ibis - Tumblr Posts

10 months ago

The story of the Australian white ibis is hysterical in many ways.

The Story Of The Australian White Ibis Is Hysterical In Many Ways.

These birds are native to Australia, yes, but they're not technically native to the cities. Or, well, kinda?

So, Australian ibises typically lived in inland wetland areas. Australia, however, is a dry-ass continent, and the swamps aren't always wet, so whenever there's a dry spell and the swamps dry up and the food dwindles, the ibis colonies will migrate to the coast for food. I suppose when their presence caused enough competition with existing coastal birds they'd fly back inland and hopefully the wetlands would be wet again.

Enter the Europeans - the ibis didn't have much contact with the white man for a hundred years or so, wetlands were too annoying to actively clear, so the white man mostly stayed out and the ibis generally doesn't leave while there's food. Or maybe they did, and the white man towns were too tiny to register for them and they just did their usual thing.

Come the 1970s, severe drought conditions once again led to ibises to flee the wetlands (and the wetlands were probably extra hurt and extra unable to recover due to water diversion for agriculture).

They went for the coasts, and there, due to the absolutely boom in Australian urban sprawl, they found....

The Story Of The Australian White Ibis Is Hysterical In Many Ways.

Huh. That's new. But was there food?

The answer was yes there was, and not only that, it was almost like the food set out specifically for them!

I am of course talking about bins.

The Story Of The Australian White Ibis Is Hysterical In Many Ways.

Bins have a couple of nifty features if you're an ibis. One, they contain food scraps, especially protein scraps. Two, the openings tend to be fairly far off the ground, so rats and other flightless creatures can't get to the food (the cockroaches can, which is a plus for the ibis because they eat bugs!)

Two, the bottoms are low, and ibises are wading birds so they have long legs and long beaks. Seagulls, crows and pigeons all have to wait for the bin to be fairly full - ibises can get in there at half full!

And three, natural environment for the ibis is diving into a fetid stagnant swamp with nasty bacteria to eat wriggling things. Their beaks and heads are specially adapted for that - they're bald, and the skin is specially adapted for diving into gross places. Their beaks are sharp and dextrous, so they can open packaging or simply pierce it to get at the tasty, tasty leftover fried chicken or whatever. And if the chicken's already got maggots? Fantastic, they love eating bugs.

So they don't wanna go back. Why the hell would they go back? And with every new drought, even more ibis leave the drying wetlands, find the cities, and decide to stay.

I mean, there's probably a selection effect - the birds that are scared of humans eventually return to their home wetlands, but the ones that aren't decide they're just gonna start nesting in the urban parks. Wetlands are also getting drier and drier (water use issues) so the wetland populations are crashing while the urban populations are exploding.

I think, the bin chicken has to be a symbol of luck. It is so insane to me that the human-designed environment ended up being an ibis paradise, where we've systematically murdered all their enemies and established abundant self-replenishing food sources that they and only them can access.

May you be as lucky as the Australian white ibis. May you leave your normal life for foreign shores and face not the expected adversity, but instead abundance and safety beyond your wildest dreams.


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These Are So Cool- Adding The Reboot Above Bc This Post Is Definitely A Thing Im Gonna Save To Help Me

These are so cool- adding the reboot above bc this post is definitely a thing I’m gonna save to help me write one of my characters!!!

writing characters with one eye

i can pretty much guarantee that ↑that↑ is not a heading you see everyday.

now i will not be giving advice on writing cyclopses, (though it may be sort of the same thing) i still hope this will be helpful for some people out there that are looking to provide a more diverse cast to their wip!

i have never ever ever read a book, watch a show movie etc etc that involves a character with one eye. (aside from those badass characters who wear eye patches bc they lost sight in one eye in some badass way)

for context: i am one of many people who was born with microphtalmia, an eye disease that results in one or both eyes develope smaller than normal at birth. i myself was born with a smaller left eye, which resulted in my left eye being removed exactly twenty days after birth.

microphthalmia (along with many other eye diseases) typically leads to being half or fully blind. i lucked out and only lost my left eye which i am so so thankful for.

i would really really love to see more representation for my community in literature, especially so people would come to see that being half blind isn’t as unusual and weird as people make it out to be.

without further ado, i present to you, a list of information, facts, and first hand experiences from yours truly!

i’ve had prosthetic eyes made to fit my eye socket for about fifteen years (i’m 16 lol) (the first 6ish months after the surgery i never had a prosthetic)

in my life i’ve had four different prosthetic eyes made because just like other people, my eye socket grew alongside the rest of me, meaning the prosthetic needed to be made bigger

i’ve had my current prosthetic for four years now, the past ones lasted about 2-3 years at a time. this one will probably last me through the rest of my life unless i need/want a new one

as opposed to most media/assumptions, my prosthetic (along with most prosthetics) is PLASTIC (people always think it’s glass) and only half a circle!!

i’ve had three surgeries related to my eye

i do not have depth perception which makes doing certain things very difficult (estimating distance, how close/far i am from something etc)

driving is not affected too much, i just have to turn my head more than other people. i believe being blind in the right eye might be more difficult, but i couldn’t say

doing my make up is kinda easy, except for eyeliner is a pain in the ASS since most people close their eye to do it on their upper lid, but clearly i can’t close my right eye whilst doing it lol

my family as well as my friends and even myself often forget i have a prosthetic, which sometimes results in awkward/funny situations

i hate walking with people on my right bc i can’t tell where they are unless i’m constantly looking down at my/their feet

i sucked at basketball bc i had such a disadvantage (no depth perception, i could only see half the court, i was constantly turning my head) but professional swimming is much easier for me since it’s not a contact sport and doesn’t really require for me to be paying attention to a million things at once

i rarely have to take my prosthetic out, and if i do, it’s either to clean it, (we do get eye crusties on our prosthetics just like other people do when they have pink eye or sever allergies) it’s bothering me/really dry, or i want to take it out to show/scare people lol

a lot of people don’t realize when i first meet them that it’s fake bc my recent prosthetic is amazing accurate to my real eye. others notice and assume i have a lazy eye since it doesn’t move

for some reason people think i can’t cry out of my left (prosthetic) eye??? i still have a tear duct??? i actually think more tears come out of my left tear duct than my right lol

i am extremely self conscious about it, but i know there are other one-eyed beauties out there who aren’t which is amazing!! i try to live vicariously through them lol

i make sooo many jokes about my eye lol, and i’m usually ok w other people making jokes as long as they aren’t like overly rude/offensive, then i’ll feel a lil bad about my self

people never really made fun of it, but kids in middle school likes to wave things in front of my left eye/on my left side that i couldn’t see which got really annoying after a while

getting custom designed prosthetics are available, but they’re really expensive (so are normal lol) they costs thousands of dollars, just like other prosthetics do

i run into things that are on my left side ALL THE TIME it’s actually kinda funny lolol

i try to hide my left eye/turn more to my left side in photos bc my eyes aren’t always looking in the same direction, which really gets to me

i wear glasses for both protection and bc my right eye is -1.75 lmao but i did used to wear non-prescription glasses purely for safety

i do have contacts to wear during the summer, swim meets etc, for when i don’t want/can’t wear my glasses but need to see. bc of this, i have a second pair of glasses that have no prescription

if doctors/scientists managed to figure out a way to fix microphthalmia (a birth defect), or do a sort of eye transplant, i would not be able to have that done to me because all parts of my left eye have been removed from my body

microphthalmia is NOT the only disease that results in the haver losing sight in one or both eyes!! there are many others, but it is not my place to share any experiences for something i have not experienced!!!

for once i just want to see a clumsy character who has one eye that WASNT a result of some tragic event.

so please please please consider including a character with one working eye in your wip. it would mean the world to myself and all the other members of the community (there’s a lot of us, trust me) plus, i wouldn’t mind starting an acting debut playing a half-blind female protagonist, that would be so dope.

that’s about all i can think of for now! please send an ask or reply to this post if you have any questions, i’m willing to answer any!!! and if you happen to be a member of the one eye club, please add to this post!! that would mean the world to me:)


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6 years ago
Medibang Vs Ibis Paint. They're Both Equally Good And Bad. I Drew Pidge Cuz Why Not.
Medibang Vs Ibis Paint. They're Both Equally Good And Bad. I Drew Pidge Cuz Why Not.
Medibang Vs Ibis Paint. They're Both Equally Good And Bad. I Drew Pidge Cuz Why Not.

Medibang vs Ibis Paint. They're both equally good and bad. I drew Pidge cuz why not.

Medibang Pro: a Whole lot of features and brushes. Con: Zoom in glitch?? (it's probably just my computer but it doesn't happen in FireAlpaca)

Ibis Paint Pro: Video Progress is a thing Con: Folder layer was nonexistent.


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5 years ago
Im A Simple Person! You Show Me An Elf With Horns And Wings And Im LikeHELL YE!!!

I’m a simple person! You show me an elf with horns and wings and I’m like HELL YE!!!


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11 months ago
Scarlet Ibis(Eudocimus Ruber), Family Threskiornithidae, Order Pelicaniformes, Northern Brazil

Scarlet Ibis (Eudocimus ruber), family Threskiornithidae, order Pelicaniformes, northern Brazil

photograph by Sergio Bitran (@sbitran)


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9 months ago

Thanks Mac, and I feel like we all had a lot of fun with this one, particularly with the Hreakgleav and a couple of others!

A lot of these track really well (I absolutely love the description of the Klethghrom/peacock), although I feel the author might be being overly charitable about the Burngraega/Swan's song (I assume this ties in with the old fable about swans singing sweetly before they die?)

Couple of extra takeaways;

The Hrongnewit / kite was an interesting one, a ubiquitous scavenger in the middle ages in Britain (think a cross between seagulls and pigeons, but a lot faster), now fortunately making a comeback (I actually saw one a couple of weeks ago!). They're not that small, but maybe the 'puny' refers to its spirit (compared to some of the other bold and glorious birds of prey we've come across in our bestiary odyssey)? Regretfully, the use of the term 'shite-hawk' in the middle ages appears to be apocryphal...

There's also the Lokfotreag / Hoopoe (at least they got the colour right!). I wanted to give something a hoopoe-like crest here, but I wasn't expecting this descrption to be for that particular bird...

I've started feeling a little defensive of the hoopoe, to be honest - 'the filthiest of birds', associated with demons and black magic. They're just little guys! With cool crests and rad orange plumage and an awesome 'upupu' call...

Then I did a little bit of research and found out that they are violent birds with oil glands that stink like rotting meat, the chicks can direct streams of excrement towards predators, live in a dirty nest and regularly practice cannibalism on one another...

Fair enough then... 😐

Bestiaryposting Results: Miscellaneous Birds

So! This is the first in our six-week wind-down of Bestiaryposting, where we run through the Honorable Mentions that appear in the Aberdeen Bestiary but didn't get their own post here because the author of the Bestiary and I have different goals.

If you don't know what any of that means, you can find out at https://maniculum.tumblr.com/bestiaryposting.

To see the entry our artists are working from, click here:

maniculum.tumblr.com
As a reminder, all previous entries in this series can be found at https://maniculum.tumblr.com/bestiaryposting . Another reminder: as menti

To see the entry people are drawing now, so that you can potentially join in, click here:

maniculum.tumblr.com
As a reminder, all previous entries in this series can be found at https://maniculum.tumblr.com/bestiaryposting . Another reminder: as menti

Art is below the cut, in roughly chronological order.

A black-and-white line drawing of a leafless tree with many birds perching in it, and more on the ground beneath.

@silverhart-makes-art (link to post here) decided to do Literally All of the birds. I am fascinated by the detail here; I particularly like the pose on the Hreakgleav, and the feathers on the Klethghrom. I would direct anyone trying to figure out which is which to the linked post, which contains a key and brief descriptions of each.

A digital drawing in the style of a medieval manuscript page with a decorative border and a gold foil background. Ten different types of birds sit in a stylized tree with thin, swirly branches.

@coolest-capybara (link to post here) has also given us a tree full of birds. The explanation in the linked post of which is which and what they were inspired by is illuminating (pun not intended), so check that out. I especially enjoy the interpretations of the Klethghrom and the Lokfotreag. (And thank you for providing alt text.)

Photo of three fictional birds drawn in marker, colored pencil, and gel pen. The birds are arranged diagonally, from the top left to the bottom right. The paper is tinted a soft greyish-blue and moderately textured. All the birds have a speech bubble. The bird on the top left says "woBRAFmet." The bird in the middle says "hREAKgleav." The bird on the bottom right says "KLethGHRom."

@wendievergreen (link to post here) has drawn three of the birds in their always-charming style. For explanations, close-ups, and individual treatments of each, please see the linked post. I really like the tail on the Hreakgleav and the... frankly insane look of the Klethghrom. (Also thank you for providing alt text.)

All right, we're going to identify these rapid-fire because there are a bunch of them and I'm not going to hand you a whole-ass essay here. Readers are encouraged to add their own commentary.

Tluftasong

A medieval manuscript illustration with a red decorative border and a gold-foil background. Inside a red-and-blue roundel, it shows a fairly gloomy-looking bird with black feathers, a large head, and a downturned beak. It appears to be walking.

The manuscript identifies this one as "night owl", but I've seen other sources refer to this entry as the "night heron". I'll leave that one to people who know birds more.

Lokfotreag

A fairly elaborate medieval manuscript drawing. It has a red-and-blue decorative border, a gold-foil background, and a pattern in the corners like dark red tiles. The center of the image is dominated by a blue-and-red quatrefoil with a circle in the middle. In the middle circle, as well as in each lobe of the quatrefoil, is an orange-ish bird with a long neck and a hooked beak. Each of the birds in the lobes of the quatrefoil are biting the bird in the middle.

This is the hoopoe. Which, as listeners to the podcast know, you can trade to demons for perpetual access to great parties. The illustration is very cool, and seems to show the young birds rejuvenating their aging parent.

Hurrashbeg

A tall, rectangular medieval manuscript illustration with a red decorative border and a gold-foil background. It is dominated by a blue-and-red Stylized Plant in which four black-and-white birds sit. A person in medieval garb stands at the bottom of the tree, shooting at the birds with a bow and arrow.

Really love the Stylized Plant, of course. One of the things that really strikes me about medieval manuscript art is how particular things that Definitely Don't Exist keep cropping up in different manuscripts, looking pretty much the same. Like, unless this is by the same artist who did the Rutland Psalter, it shows an interestingly consistent artistic tradition -- I swear that's the exact same plant, and in a couple other places in the manuscript they have the exact same wyvern.

Anyway, those are clearly magpies. I don't know why they're being shot at.

Konchilkuk

This one didn't get an illustration, but it's the woodpecker.

Wobrahfmet

A medieval manuscript illustration with a red-and-blue decorative border and a gold-foil background. Within a red-and-blue roundel is a bird that is very identifiably a corvid.

Yep, that sure is a raven. They actually have a really long entry, but it's mostly about what they symbolize.

Hrongnewit

A medieval manuscript illustration with a red-and-blue decorative border and a gold-foil background. Inside a reddish roundel is a brown-feathered bird of prey with a broad tail.

This one is the kite. Yeah, that looks pretty believable.

Klomurgrae

Medieval, decorative border, gold, you don't need me to say this every time. It shows the same eagle-esque bird we keep seeing throughout the manuscript. It is feeding its chicks in a bowl-like nest which is perched on top of some Stylized Plants. The bird is also standing on top of a blue wyvern with a red head and red-and-green feathers.

This is... apparently the ibis. Also, from the context of the entry, I think it's intended to be standing on a snake. Neither of those look like the things they are supposed to be.

Zagsmenrok

Within our usual fancy illustration milieu -- this time with an especially elaborate roundel of green, red, blue, and white -- we see a small, nondescript brown bird.

This is the blackbird. I have no explanation for why it's brown. The illustrator clearly has access to black ink.

Hreakgleav

Medieval illustration showing a yellow-feathered owl with "horns" and a downturned beak.

Yep, that's very clearly an owl.

Wahrembeag

Another illustration with an elaborate roundel (the same one as last time). In the center is a small dark bird perched on the edge of a bowl-like nest which contains several eggs.

It tickles me that these are right next to each other, because there's a moderately-well-known Middle English poem called "the Owl and the Nightingale". This is pure coincidence; they're not together in the bestiary, there are a few birds in between.

Oh yeah, this is the Nightingale.

Sarbrufeat

A medieval illustration showing three heron-like birds with white feathers.

This is the heron. The illustration seems broadly correct, but do herons come in white? That's an egret, surely.

Keltrumram

A medieval illustration showing a reddish bird with a long neck and a large beak. It is turning backwards to apparently groom its back with its beak.

This is the coot -- doesn't look like one to me, but maybe the artist and I are familiar with different species of coot. Readers may recall its cameo in the Eagle entry; its own is unfortunately rather shorter.

Grozfarwat

A medieval illustration shows a small brown bird on top of a small hill inside an elaborate roundel.

Meet the quail. I was initially confused, but apparently the plume thing I associate with quails is not actually common to all species of quail. So... yeah, good quail.

Mortelgeng

An illustration of similar description to the others in this post. It shows what is clearly a crow.

Very definitely a crow.

Burngraega

Another similar illustration, this one obviously a swan.

Also very identifiable, here's the swan. Head and beak seem a bit flatter and wider than I would expect, though.

Klethghrom

One last medieval illustration, this one a surprisingly accurate depiction of a peacock.

This was basically the poster child for "too obvious to get its own entry". Here's the peacock.

And that's it for this week, it's late. Talk amongst yourselves, or tell me what you think about all these birds.


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You forgot a couple

9. The fucking Bin Chicken (affectionately called an Australian Ibis)

You Forgot A Couple

10. The national bird of my country: the kiwi

Because how the FUCK is this a bird. No wings. Eats grubs and stuff. Is basically blind and gets around based on smell. And is nocturnal.

That is not a bird. That is a fluff ball on legs with a straw for a beak.

You Forgot A Couple

LITERALLY KIWI EGGS ARE 18% OF THEIR BODY WEIGHT

You Forgot A Couple

Please. That is too much egg for ANYONE.

why are birds so cursed


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1 year ago
Meet Derica! She's My Other Alien Oc:3 I Might Show Who's Leon Bcs Yes
Meet Derica! She's My Other Alien Oc:3 I Might Show Who's Leon Bcs Yes

Meet derica! She's my other alien oc:3 i might show who's leon bcs yes 🔥

Actually i proud at this since its neon😍


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1 year ago
Wallace Content Dump
Wallace Content Dump
Wallace Content Dump
Wallace Content Dump

Wallace content dump

My lastt few posts rlly got more attention than I expected so ty 4 that ^w^

Also sorry for lack of consistency in every way but lots of new shit will be coming as soon as I finish exams and get a drawing tablet! :33


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1 year ago
Drew Arianna Again, This Looks A Bit Better Than The Original, But Is There Anything I Add To Improve

Drew Arianna again, this looks a bit better than the original, but is there anything I add to improve on? This is just the neck up part art.


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3 years ago
Scarlet Ibis (Eudocimus Ruber), Omaha Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium, 2021, Jey Schroeder

Scarlet ibis (Eudocimus ruber), Omaha Henry Doorly Zoo & Aquarium, 2021, Jey Schroeder


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