chicks.

Bunnies Picking Up Chicks

Bunnies seem so innocent and fluffy, but there are bonafide ladies' men hiding under a few of those cotton tails. Why do you think Playboy uses a bunny as its logo? These rabbits have got game when it comes to chicks. You may never look at the Easter Bunny the same way again.  WORRIED WABBIT Charles the Easter Bunny…

The Easter tradition of dyeing eggs has been around for centuries, but the practice of dyeing what's inside the egg is still relatively new. According to the New York Times, the coloring of chicks is a hit with some but seen as unethical by others. In about half of all U.S. states, the dyeing of animals is illegal, but for the other 50 percent, coloring chicks is an easy way to make money in the spring. The state of Florida is just figuring this out after nullifying a 45-year-old law that prohibited the dyeing of animals. While the ...

A little chick is too young to understand the ways of the world. What ways do we mean? For example, the way that cats are natural hunters specifically designed by nature to kill and eat small rodents and birds, including baby chickens. But this particular cat seems to have some years on him, and with age comes wisdom, like the wisdom to know that no one need be a slave to instinct, not even a cat. And since there's no other reason but instinct to kill an innocent chick who just wants a warm place to snuggle, there's no shame in ignoring millennia of genetic programming and letting love rule. ...

A lot of people get upset by nature videos that depict scenes of animals hunting other animals. These people don't like to see images of a predator taking down its prey in the wild. But look, folks, this is the way the world is. You can hide from it if you want to, but that doesn't change the violent, visceral reality of nature. You can't tell a wild animal to go vegan. Animals kill each other and they eat each other. If we want to learn about the world around us, we need to accept that and even study it. That's why these videos exist. If it's too gruesome, just look away. Look away. ...

Lombard/ NYDailyNews.com Not far from the hustle and bustle of Wall Street, four fluffy Peregrine falcon chicks have been officially welcomed into the city. The babies were born less than a month ago at 55 Water Street, where their parents, Rocky and Jubilee, have lived for more than 10 years, reports the New York Daily News. The healthy brood is one of 15 active falcon nests throughout NYC and an estimated 70 across the state. These numbers are small, but still good news when you consider that in the 1960s the species nearly went extinct due to pesticide residue in its prey. Because of this, Peregrine falcons remain endangered, and are carefully monitored. The N.Y. Daily News took this ...