SteveW
Member
Registered: 15th Jul 02
Location: Up in the clouds
User status: Offline
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I think they do... a mate thinks they dont.
I know they area flightless bird, but it does have some form of flappy things..

Cheers
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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No wings!
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SteveW
Member
Registered: 15th Jul 02
Location: Up in the clouds
User status: Offline
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THEY DO...
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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No they dont
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Simon
Member
Registered: 24th Apr 03
Location: Oxfordshire
User status: Offline
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have wings cant fly tho
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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No wings hence they cant fly!
I been there and seen with my own eyes
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SteveW
Member
Registered: 15th Jul 02
Location: Up in the clouds
User status: Offline
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I used to live there.. I sware they do.. ok they might only be small. but what would the point be if they didn't have any wings.. They wouldn't be allowed to be called "birds"
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Heather
Member
Registered: 1st Aug 02
Location: Ellesmere Port
User status: Offline
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Mmmmmmmmmmmmm kiwi fruit !
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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Thats why there nearly extinct mate
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Mistamist
Member
Registered: 16th Jul 03
Location: Gillingham, Kent
User status: Offline
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Kiwis are the smallest of the ratites, a group of flightless birds that include the rheas of South America,
the ostriches of Africa, the emu of Australia, and the extinct moa of New Zealand.
The Kiwi occurs only in New Zealand, and is the symbol of this country.
Since New Zealand did not evolve mammals due to its isolation from the rest of the world, the Kiwi has taken on the role traditionally occupied by moles and
hedgehogs in other eco-systems.
The Kiwi resembles mammals rather than birds in several ways. The Kiwi has bone marrow, unlike other birds that have hollow bones.
Although primarily a bird of New Zealand’s native forests, kiwis also live in scrub and native grasslands.
Because the kiwi is a semi-nocturnal, secretive bird, few New Zealanders have seen their national bird in the wild.
It is the sole survivor of an ancient order of birds including the now extinct moas.
It is a flightless bird about the size of a
domestic fowl.
It has coarse, bristly, hair-like feathers.
Females are larger than males.
Whereas birds traditionally depend on sight, the kiwi is one of the few birds with a highly developed sense of smell.
Being the only known bird to have external nostrils at the end of its bill, it literally sniffs out its food a bill-length below the surface.
Mindblowingly interesting!
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vibrio
Banned
Registered: 28th Feb 01
Location: POAH
User status: Offline
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they have wings
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SteveW
Member
Registered: 15th Jul 02
Location: Up in the clouds
User status: Offline
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Still dont say if they have wings or not
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SteveW
Member
Registered: 15th Jul 02
Location: Up in the clouds
User status: Offline
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Thank you Vibs
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IntaCepta
Member
Registered: 25th Mar 02
Location: Mill Hill East, Greater London
User status: Offline
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they have wings, but they can't use them
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Adam
Member
Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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Where the fuck are the wings in that pic then?????? 
[Edited on 23-01-2004 by Evisu]
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Adam
Member
Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
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http://www.kcc.org.nz/birds/kiwi.asp
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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No wings!
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Nismo
Member
Registered: 12th Sep 02
User status: Offline
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can we splice one with a albertros
would be cool
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Adam
Member
Registered: 1st May 01
Location: Hurstbourne Tarrant
User status: Offline
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quote:
KiWi Due to under-developed wings and no tail the KiWi is a flightless bird. It has a long beak with nostrils at the tip, to aid in finding food beneath the forest floor. It feeds at night and dwells in the virgin forests of New Zealand and is an extremely fast runner, consequencently, it is rarely seen in its natural environment.
[Edited on 23-01-2004 by Adam]
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IntaCepta
Member
Registered: 25th Mar 02
Location: Mill Hill East, Greater London
User status: Offline
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they have wings!
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IntaCepta
Member
Registered: 25th Mar 02
Location: Mill Hill East, Greater London
User status: Offline
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SteveW
Member
Registered: 15th Jul 02
Location: Up in the clouds
User status: Offline
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Cheers IntaCepta...
Told you they have wings 
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MatthewR
Member
Registered: 21st Oct 02
Location: Rickmansworth
User status: Offline
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Underveloped wings! Hardly wings
Damn it!
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IntaCepta
Member
Registered: 25th Mar 02
Location: Mill Hill East, Greater London
User status: Offline
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nevertheless they are technically 'wings'
what else are they then?
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