ReePrime
Brightfeather and the Tricky Spark

Hosted by Dailymotion. For legal issues report at the Copyright Center, report us on DMC, or use the Instant Removal tool.

Brightfeather and the Tricky Spark

J
Just Watch

5 Views • May 11, 2026

Description

Brightfeather the Rooster was always curious and a little mischievous. One sunny afternoon, he found some leftover sparks from the hearth and thought, “I wonder what would happen if I poke them!”

Mischief the Rabbit, wearing his green knitted sweater and patchwork trousers, hopped over. “Brightfeather, fire is dangerous! Don’t play with it!”

“Bah! It’s just a tiny spark,” Brightfeather said with a wink.

He poked the sparks with a stick—and POP! A tiny burst of flame shot into the air. Brightfeather jumped back in surprise and landed in a wheelbarrow full of hay. BOING! The wheelbarrow tipped over, sending hay flying everywhere. KABOOM! A small stack of hay bales tumbled, rolling like cartoon barrels, narrowly missing Mischief, who dodged with a laugh.

Brightfeather flapped his wings frantically, trying to put out the flames. Sparks flew like fireworks, landing in a barrel of water—SPLASH!—soaked Brightfeather from head to tail feathers. He looked like a soggy yellow mop.

Mischief quickly called other animals to help. Together, they stomped, splashed, and bucketed water everywhere, finally stopping the funny little blaze. Brightfeather shook off the water, dripping and embarrassed.

“I… I didn’t realize fire could be so tricky—and so… explosive!” Brightfeather admitted, feathers ruffled and scorched a little.

Mischief smiled. “Brightfeather, it’s fine to be curious, but fire isn’t a toy. Playing carelessly can be dangerous. See? Even funny explosions can cause trouble.”

Brightfeather nodded, still dripping, but wiser. “I promise, no more poking sparks. And thank you, Mischief, for saving me—and my feathers!”

From that day on, Brightfeather learned that curiosity is good, but safety, responsibility, and asking for help are even better. And whenever he saw a tiny spark, he remembered the funniest, wettest, silliest fire of all.