Well, i found him/her while i was watering tomatoes and eggplants...i thought it was a plum or something like that...instead i realized it was just a bird...a big little bird..not sure what maybe a crow...
i tried to help him to fly but i really dont know how to fly...maybe If I had wings i could help him to fly up to the mountains, to fly up to the sky.
If I had wings on my feet, i could see planet earth from high above a rainbow, see planet earth from a distant sun.
No, we cannot fly. It takes more than wings to be able to fly: birds have a special cardiovascular system that is adapted to allow more efficient breathing, and a stronger circulation, to provide wing muscles with oxygen. Also (as others have mentioned) birds have special "hollow" bones: not actually hollow, but much less dense than our bones.
here some drawings from The Master Leonardo da Vinci:
In the glider designed by him, the flier's position is conceived in such a way as to allow him to balance himself by adequately moving the lower part of his body. The wings, an imitation of the wings of bats and of large birds, are fixed in their innermost section (closest to the person) and mobile in their outer section. The latter in fact can be flexed by the flier by means of a control cable maneuvered through handles. Leonardo had developed this solution after having studied the structure of birds' wings and having observed that the inner part of their wings moved more slowly than the outer part and that, therefore, the function of this part was to sustain rather than to push forward.


even if i cannot still fly...lol..even if i studied those flying machines from the Master ... well the bird after three days got to fly...i dont really know his destination but i am sure that he started his travel, his exciting travel of freedom.
Eureka, i found it!! The Eurasian Jay (Garrulus glandarius) is a species of bird occurring over a vast region from Western Europe and north-west Africa to the eastern seaboard of Asia and down into south-east Asia. Across its vast range, several very distinct racial forms have evolved to look very different from each other, especially when forms at the extremes of its range are compared.
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