Today we are having TURKEY and mashed POTATOES, Cranberry sauce, cooked carrots, stuffing, gravy and cherry pie! I can't wait to have the giblets! Mom cooks them special for us cats.
These are our local turkeys. We have a flock of wild turkeys that hangs around our village. They have been part of our village for about 10 years. Were we live in BC, we have the Merriam’s subspecies of wild turkey, it is one of 5 subspecies in North America.
BC is the most northerly extent of the species in North America. The wild turkey lives all over North America and recently, they have been re-introduced and introduced into almost every ecosystem in North America. Wild turkey in BC is a non-native the same as partridge, pheasant, quail, rainbow trout in Region 4 and the plains-bison in Northern BC. But science shows that wild turkey is not invasive nor are they a threat to native flora and fauna or the health of domestic livestock or poultry. AND wild turkey is native to Idaho which is where BC’s population immigrated from.
Turkey Consumption: Turkey is a central part of the Canadian Thanksgiving meal. In 2020, Canadians purchased 2.5 million whole turkeys, accounting for 36% of all whole turkeys sold that year.
Turkey Country or Bird...Have you ever stopped to think how weird it is that a country (Turkey) has the same name as our Thanksgiving bird of choice? You might have thought it was a coincidence, but get this: In turkey, they call it Greek chicken; In Greece, they call it Peru; In Peru, they call it French Chicken; and in France they call it Indian Chicken. The bird we now know as the turkey was indeed named for the country of Turkey! As it turns out, the first explorers brought the turkey back to Europe through Turkey. Because of that, the bird was colloquially called Turkish guineafowl. It was later just shortened to turkey.
Many domesticated turkeys have been bred to be white so that the carcass doesn’t show feather spots when plucked.
A man by the name of Joe Hutto spent a year trying to be a turkey. A few of the friends of Untamed Science crew made an award winning documentary about it called My Life as a Turkey.
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| My Life as a Turkey chronicles Hutto's remarkable and moving experience of raising a group of wild turkey hatchlings to adulthood |
NOW you can wow all of your furrends with your little known Turkey Facts!
Happy Thanksgiving!





happy thanksgiving to you all
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving to all of you. I love Canada and the people of Canada, but I do not like turkey.
ReplyDeleteI think it stems back to when we were first married. My in-laws reared turkeys for Christmas and I used to help pluck them. When it was finished and they were sold he gave us a turkey for our Christmas dinner. It was my first time cooking a turkey, so I prepared it and tried to put it in the oven, and managed with Ivor's help I can't remember the weight but think it was around 24 pounds and I tried to cook the whole darned thing for two of us! We lived on turkey for the next week, sandwiches, stir fry, chilli, cottage pie, you name it, I tried it.
I was so sick to death of the sight of turkey that I have never eaten it since!
Hari OM
ReplyDeleteMarv, that was most interesting... I sort of knew about the naming of the Turkey due to transportation, but didn't know about all those other names for it! I hope you all have a wonderfurs day together. Hugs and wags, YAM-aunty xxx
Happy Thanksgiving to all of you!
ReplyDeleteLuvin' this Marv. Good to learn all the other turkey bird names! Who knew? Yer mom knew, that's who.
ReplyDeleteHave a great day. And eat lots fur me.
I learned something new today. Thank you for that.
ReplyDelete• ★ Happy ★* 。 • ˚ ˚ ˛ ˚ ˛ •
•。★ Thanksgiving ★。* 。
° 。 ° ˛˚˛ * _Π_____*。*˚
˚ ˛ •˛•˚ */______/~\。˚ ˚ ˛
˚ ˛ •˛• ˚| 田田 |門| ˚
* Grateful ♫•*¨* Blessed♪♫•*¨*
I linked this post to Awww Mondays.
Have a fabulous day and week. Scritches all around, a smooch to Marvelous Marv and a big hug to mom. ♥
Happy Thanksgiving! Tigris and Styx
ReplyDeletesave me sum turkey marv!!!
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving! I can't wait for our turkey day here too.
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving Marv!! I know you guys are having giblets but ask mom for some white meat tidbits too. XXXX
ReplyDeleteI did not know Turkey, the country was named after the bird Turkey. neat!
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving!!! Enjoy. We think we saw some of the cousins of those turkeys. They are always camped out at the donkey lady's house we pass on our walks
ReplyDeleteWoos - Misty and Timber
Happy Canadian Thanksgiving! XO
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving from all of us!
ReplyDeleteWe have turkeys around here, too. And sometimes they Are around and we can see their footprints in the snow! MJF used to sniff them and follow their 'trail as far as his leash would allow...it was 25 feet long. I do not use that leash with my current hooligans! BOL!
ReplyDeleteHappy Thanksgiving from this transplanted Canadian to YOU all!
Happy belated Thanksgiving my friends...I hope everybuddy got a taste of some yummy foods
ReplyDeleteHugs cecilia
Java Bean: "Ayyy, happy belated Canadian Thanksgiving to you! Good job showing those turkeys who's boss!"
ReplyDeleteI fell behind in blog reading because of the wedding this weekend and I don't know if I'll ever catch up, but I do pray you had a blessed and beautiful Happy Thanksgiving.
ReplyDelete