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User:Iancaddy

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Hello and welcome to my page. I'm expanding it with a few pretty userboxes of, at the moment, a non-polemical nature and having discovered just how cool some of the pictures of the day are that's here too.

I'm a budding amateur on Wikipedia and generally I just correct things that I notice are wrong or read badly when browsing through, e.g. typos. I also add little bits of knowledge where I can and update articles where needed. I also like to have my say in deletion discussions etc.. I'm beginning to branch out into writing articles from scratch but, with over a million on here, I struggle to find things that aren't covered and that I might have a slim chance of understanding were I to research them.

If you disagree with anything I've written then please do say although if there's anything controversial I'll more than likely have written about it on the relevant discussion page. Or you could just write me a note to say hello. You could even write it in a different language to help me expand on my pathetic linguistic ability - I only have it up there to put myself to shame in the hope that I do something about it.


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


Travelogue...

[edit]
I'm from the which, for better and for worse, is in the , the and also the and I've been to or lived...
...for this long... ...in these countries... ...and these places...
Just passing through
A few days
5 days +
10 days +
15 days +
3 weeks +
3 months +
3 years +

Idea and layout pilfered from Lcarsdata, who took it
from NeilTarrant, who purloined it from A bit iffy,
who half-inched it from Calton, who filched it
from Salsb, who stole it from Guettarda,
who borrowed it from White Cat.

Just a bit of fun... 2006 World Cup

[edit]
 
Round of 16Quarter-finalsSemi-finalsFinal
 
              
 
24 June - Munich
 
 
 Germany3
 
30 June - Berlin
 
 Sweden1
 
 Germany (pen)0 (4)
 
24 June - Leipzig
 
 Argentina0 (3)
 
 Argentina2
 
4 July - Dortmund
 
 Portugal0
 
 Germany2
 
26 June - Kaiserslautern
 
 Tunisia1
 
 Ghana3
 
30 June - Hamburg
 
 Croatia (AET)4
 
 Croatia1
 
26 June - Cologne
 
 Tunisia2
 
 France1
 
9 July - Berlin
 
 Tunisia (AET)2
 
 Germany2
 
25 June - Stuttgart
 
 England (AET)4
 
 England3
 
1 July - Gelsenkirchen
 
 Poland1
 
 England (AET)3
 
25 June - Nuremberg
 
 Ivory Coast2
 
 Mexico1
 
5 July - Munich
 
 Ivory Coast2
 
 England2
 
27 June - Dortmund
 
 Brazil1 Third place
 
 Brazil2
 
1 July - Frankfurt8 July - Stuttgart
 
 Czech Republic1
 
 Brazil1 Brazil2
 
27 June - Hannover
 
 Spain0  Tunisia (AET)3
 
 Spain (pen)1 (3)
 
 
  Switzerland1 (2)
 


Mmm, an intriguing set of predictions... does my mind really think that this could happen? Of course, any similarities between one of the scorelines here and that of the 1966 World Cup Final are purely coincidental. And somewhat optimistic as well.