Early evolutionary man, inhabitants of planets sometimes overrun with larger animals, make extensive use of intelligent, affectionate, and obedient passenger birds capable of flying nonstop for over five hundred miles and speaking many words. [1]
Bon successfully trained fandors as passenger birds before their extinction 30,000 years ago, marking the end of an era where carrier pigeons were used for long-distance messaging. [2] Early evolutionary man tamed and utilized intelligent, obedient, and affectionate passenger birds that could fly two men nonstop for 500 miles. [3]
Adam and Eve inspected the Garden of Eden from large passenger birds, the fandors, on their third day on earth, before being taken to the temple by the midwayers. [4] 45 million years ago, an ostrichlike bird was ancestor of gigantic passenger birds that transported human beings through the air. [5]