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User:sonic3KMaster

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Chaos This user is hiding the 7th Chaos Emerald from Sonic.
This user edits articles about Washington State Routes.
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This kitty was removed from Cat because it was unnecessary, so I'm showing it off here.

Hello, I joined Wikipedia February 14, 2006. Here's my first edit. Hah. I'm not sure what I was thinking...

Since then, I've been doing better, productive edits, primarily on Sonic Games. Owning almost all of them myself, and watching the television show, I feel I know Sonic enough to make articles and expand current ones. Other than Sonic articles, I also occasionally help with the Washington Highway Project. When I get board, I occasionally welcome newcomers, or patrol the Recent changes page.


Common starling
The common starling (Sturnus vulgaris) is a medium-sized perching bird in the starling family, Sturnidae. It is about 20 centimetres (8 inches) long and has glossy black plumage, which is speckled with white at some times of year. The legs are pink and the bill is black in winter and yellow in summer; young birds have browner plumage than the adults. It is a noisy bird, especially in communal roosts, with an unmusical but varied song. The starling has about a dozen subspecies breeding in open habitats across its native range in temperate Europe and western Asia, and it has been introduced elsewhere. This bird is resident in southern and western Europe and southwestern Asia, while northeastern populations migrate south and west in winter. The starling builds an untidy nest in a natural or artificial cavity in which four or five glossy, pale blue eggs are laid. These take two weeks to hatch and the young remain in the nest for another three weeks. The species is omnivorous, taking a wide range of invertebrates, as well as seeds and fruit. The starling's gift for mimicry has been noted in literature including the medieval Welsh Mabinogion and the works of Pliny the Elder and William Shakespeare. This common starling was photographed at Bodega Head on the northern coast of the U.S. state of California.Photograph credit: Frank Schulenburg