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My company showed up to late for Christmas dinner.

The cats are sure interested. Maybe they should be afraid of them.

But, that is a really cool photo and video!
 
I really can’t tell. I think looking close at the video two of them might be males. There was at least 16 that I counted
 
What I had found on the internet it said females have brown tips to their chest feathers and the males have black. I can’t really tell.
 
Turkeys are truly one of the strangest birds in North America.

When I counted inventory for several years at my company, I had to go out to underground magazines and like clockwork, the flock of turkeys would show up en masse walking around the day after turkey season ended.

It's uncanny. Hunters may go days without ever seeing one, and then a flock just walks up on the highway.
 
Wow, I am impressed. We have had a rare turkey or two show up twice over many years, but I have never seen that many before.
 
^Not sure about that... They do have the reputation of being dumb (e.g., stories about them drowning standing outside, staring up at the sky when its pouring rain). But I've heard they aren't dumb--and doing an Internet search on turkey intelligence found articles arguing they are smarter than we've given them credit for. Which, admittedly, doesn't take much intelligence.

One thing I have to wonder, though, is what difference in intelligence there might be between wild turkeys and the ones raised in captivity for meat. I do know the ones in captivity, through the magic of breeding, has resulted in some changes. IIRC they can't breed normally. They may be too heavy for their bodies--I know someone who got a turkey to be a pet,and the poor thing had to be put down because the legs weren't strong enough for the fully grown body. I hope, given the horrific conditions on factory farms, that maybe captive turkeys are so dumb they have no idea what's going on...
 
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