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Waterfowl Etc. : Turkey Trivia
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 Message 1 of 3 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSassySadie72  (Original Message)Sent: 8/2/2007 3:08 AM

What is that wobbly little thing on the turkey's chin called, and what is it made of?

It is the turkey's beard and is made up of keratin bristles. Keratin is the same substance that forms hair and horns on other animals.



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 Message 2 of 3 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSassySadie72Sent: 8/2/2007 3:43 AM

Turkey Trivia
Fun Facts About America's Favorite Bird. 
A long-time centerpiece of American holiday feasts, the turkey has a colorful and delicious history. Here are some intriguing facts about our nation's favorite bird, that you may not know:

Turkeys originated in North and Central America, and evidence indicates that they have been around for over 10 million years


Until 1863, Thanksgiving Day had not been celebrated annually since the first feast in 1621. This changed in 1863 when Sarah Josepha Hale encouraged Abraham Lincoln to set aside the last Thursday in November "as a day for national thanksgiving and prayer."

In Mexico, the turkey was considered a sacrificial bird

Domesticated turkeys (farm raised) cannot fly. Wild turkeys can fly for short distances
at up to 55 miles per hour. Wild turkeys are also fast on the ground, running at speeds of up to 25 miles per hour.

Only male turkeys (toms) gobble. Females (hens) make a clicking noise. The gobble is a seasonal call during the spring and fall. Hens are attracted for mating when a tom gobbles. Wild toms love to gobble when they hear loud sounds or settle in for the night.

The heaviest turkey ever raised weighed in at 86 pounds -- about the size of a large German Shepherd -- and was grown in England, according to Dr. Sarah Birkhold, poultry specialist with the Texas Agricultural Extension Service

Mature turkeys have 3,500 or so feathers. The Apache Indians considered the turkey timid and wouldn't eat it or use its feathers on their arrows.

More than 45 million turkeys are cooked and 525 million pounds of turkey are eaten during Thanksgiving

 Ninety percent of American homes eat turkey on Thanksgiving Day. Fifty percent eat turkey on Christmas

 North Carolina produces 61 million turkeys annually, more than any other state. Minnesota and Arkansas are number two and three.

Benjamin Franklin, the great American statesman, thought the turkey was so American it should have been chosen as our national symbol rather than the eagle.


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 Message 3 of 3 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameSassySadie72Sent: 8/2/2007 3:43 AM
General Facts
The turkey species are native to the Americas and were domesticated by Aztecs in Mexico 500 years ago. Turkeys were taken to Spain from 1500 quicly spreading across Europe. For many years they like crackers have been a symbol of Christmas Thomas Tusser wrote a book in rhyme about farming in 1573 and said that at that time he had "Beef, mutton and pork, shred pies of the best, pig, veal, goose and capon and the turkey well dressed.".

Barnaby George wrote one of the first books on Livestock (Four Books on Husbandry) in 1578 where he remarks that "Turkey cocks we have not long had among us, for before the year of our Lord, 1530, they were not seen with us.".

The Pilgrims and other settlers brought turkeys back with them to New England these were crossed with wild indigenous stocks. This new type was itself taken back to England where a game keep named John Bull began to select for a broader breast. He later emigrated to Canada and bringing turkeys with him, selling them as "broad-breasted" turkeys.As a species they are facing a greater threat of extinction or constricting bloodlines than any other poultry except the large geese often for the same reasons . . . farming has changed; fewer people with the space and money taken to keep the breeds, fashion . . . they are not as cute and obvious as a call duck or bantam chicken.

In Britain they are assisted by the Rare Breeds Trust some poultry clubs have shows for them as in Hants and Berks in October and January and the Poultry Club National.