The term "As The Crow Flies" came from British coastal vessels that customarily carried a cage of crows. Crows detest large expanses of water and head, as straight as a crow flies, towards the nearest land if released at sea - very useful if you were unsure of the nearest land when sailing in foggy waters before the days of radar. The lookout perch on sailing vessels thus became known as the crow's nest
Most would say no. Crows are associated with evil.
Crows are very smart and curious. It was probably checking to see if you had food or were looking for food and could steal some. They learn very quickly that if a human is near (farmers) food is near also. Most large crows are not very afraid of people.
No Of course not!
Ravens feathers generally have a blue-ish tinge to them as they are so black, and they are bigger than most crows. crows also tend to have a larger head than ravens. Ravens are generally larger(21" vs 17") with a wedgeshaped tail, and crows seldom glide for more than 2-3 seconds. I think they have different shaped beaks
Well, if it flies on the side of your head, turns to you, then stares at you means you will die, but I don't know what happens if it just stares at you.
HDI - Head to Disk Interference.
Not a whole lot, get it on your head though... And I can almost certainly say you'll be in tears.
head crash
The term "As The Crow Flies" came from British coastal vessels that customarily carried a cage of crows. Crows detest large expanses of water and head, as straight as a crow flies, towards the nearest land if released at sea - very useful if you were unsure of the nearest land when sailing in foggy waters before the days of radar. The lookout perch on sailing vessels thus became known as the crow's nest
i don't know what is the answer! sorry
HeadCrash
Scare crows don't fly.
Most would say no. Crows are associated with evil.
i don't know what is the answer! sorry
i don't know what is the answer! sorry
When the lead goose gets tired, he rotates back in the wing and another goose flies point.