1 minute read

SEQUOIA ANIMAL REVIEW

BY ALEXANDER COTTRELL Staff Reporter

To start, bigger is better, and the ravens have size. As the school’s mascot, ravens represent power, pride, and respect. Ravens are majestic, mysterious creatures. They are highly intelligent animals and at the very least, they aren’t stupid like some other birds on campus.

Simply by not being a pest, the raven is well ahead its fellow birds, the pigeon and the seagull. While the raven is neither the hero we need or deserve, being the school mascot earns them some bonus points, so they get a 7.

seagull’s dedication to chasing the bag, trying its hardest each time to snatch some trash from students and staff. As with the raven, the seagull gets some points for its size but unfortunately, seagulls came equipped with a worse color palette than the raven.

In dead last is the pigeon. The pigeon is the bottom feeder of Sequoia. They’re just as dirty as the rats, but unlike rats, pigeons doesn’t any special skills. Pigeons are not pretty or particularly smart, they’re simply pests. Constantly going after food scraps and trash, they hound students and simply won’t go away. To add on, their poops uglifies the campus and sometimes, pigeons poop on people. Getting pooped on is an unpleasent experience, to say the least.

The pigeon gets the lowest rating possible, a 1.

This article is from: