Crested Partridge (Rollulus rouloul), B - female, T - male, family Phasianidae, order Galliformes, Sabah, Borneo
photograph via: Tropical Birding Tours
seen from China
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Crested Partridge (Rollulus rouloul), B - female, T - male, family Phasianidae, order Galliformes, Sabah, Borneo
photograph via: Tropical Birding Tours
Józef Chełmoński (Polish, 1849–1914) - Kuropatwy na Śniegu (Partridges in the Snow) (1891)
"The Vaster World"
Well! This is it! The very last epilogue of "Pinepaw and the Forgotten World"!
This epilogue in particular took me awhile to write, because I had to get it exactly how I wanted. Pinewing and Cormorantleaf's relationship is one of the main focuses of the story, and I really felt I needed to explore it the way it deserved. Especially important to me was showing that despite how much they love each other, there's still a ton of baggage and difficulities they needed to work out. I honestly think it would be unrealistic for two characters with so much trauma to just skip off happily together, but I also wanted to emphasize how they could still reconcile in the end. Not all relationships work out, but Pinewing and Cormorantleaf both felt that the other was extremely important to them, and the relationship was something they both wanted. So they were willing to put in the work of building it back up.
I had a ton of fun drawing older Pinewing and Cormorantleaf. I started doodling Pinewing with full facial hair something like a year ago, and I've been so desperate to finally get it into the comic since. It feels so right for him, like his perfect final form. After a life full of pressure and difficulty Pinewing just wants to be a happy old man who gets to kiss his husband every day, and sometimes profesy the future writ flesh. Goodbye, my little blue cat; I'm gonna miss you.
The title of this epilogue comes from "Mimsy Were The Borogoves" by Lewis Padgett: "They would survive, but they would not know how to swim downstream, to the vaster world of the ocean.”
In the end, the whole project wraps up at 64,501 words, 370 pages, and two and a half years of production time. I started this project expecting it to be a minor thing I occasionally drew on the side, something a few people might find interesting. The enormously positive response has absolutely blown me away and continues to do so, and I am forever so grateful that thousands of people can enjoy and meaningfully relate to this story.
Thank you, as always, to everyone who has commented, shared, reblogged, theorized, made fanart, made fanfiction, told their friends, liked it, or just read it at all. Though I won't go into the specific details, PATFW is an extremely personal and cathartic creation of mine, so the fact that many of you have also told me that it connected with you on an emotional level is genuinely heart-touching. I appreciate all your readership through these years. It means a lot.
-Raz
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Birds of Winter
jukkarisikko
Imagine
your watermill stops working one day because the river lost water and when you investigate it's because a beaver family build a dam up the river
a villager got bitten by a fox with rabies and you gotta find the fox and put it out of its misery before it harms any other human or animal you befriend a murder of ravens and they show you little secret spots where rare items are hidden
you throw so much distraction bait at the pack of wolves in the forest they start sniffing you with wagging tails
Cedrick killed a mother bear in self defense and is now left with a bear cub and you gotta help him decide what to do
a kestrel accidentally flew into one of your barns, broke a wing and can't get out
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This is concept art to my purely hypothetical farm simulator game with the current working title A Plot In The Haze. This is not a cozy “ideal world” simulator, nor is it a 100% realistic economy simulator.
Vincent van Gogh ~ Korenveld met patrijs (Wheatfield with Partridge), 1887
[Source: vangoghmuseum.nl]
Field chickens
Got to see them in real life for the first time a while ago!
Ruffed grouse, aka partridge, aka mountain pheasant, aka wood chicken, aka pine hen, aka the drummer (Bonada umbellus).