The Silver State's bird crosses the basin and the range
Nevada adopted the Mountain Bluebird in 1967. NV is mostly basin-and-range high desert; the bird flies the Great Basin from one mountain spine to the next, blue against sage every mile of the way.
Where it fits
The Mountain Bluebird is the official state bird of:
Idaho (1931) · Nevada (1967)
Two Mountain West states. Same sky-blue bird, same big-country backdrop.
Why a Mountain Bluebird
- The blue is electric. A flash visible against pinyon-juniper or sagebrush from across the valley.
- It hovers like a kestrel. Watches, drops, eats, repeats. A bird that wastes no motion.
- It nests in cavities. Takes what the woodpeckers left. Practical.
What "rebel" adds in Nevada
Nevada is Silver State independence, frontier-character self-reliance, and the kind of big-sky high-desert toughness that comes with not having a neighbor for a while. The Rebel Mountain Bluebird is for the version of you that knows the back road through Eureka County, that fixes things instead of replacing them, that takes care of the next house down without making a thing of it. Silver State character: self-reliant, place-rooted, plainspoken, neighbor-first by reflex.
Coming soon
The Rebel Mountain Bluebird Collection is in design. Same premium blanks as the Loon and Meadowlark lines, same DTF print quality, same Upper-Midwest design / USA print pipeline.
Want first crack at the launch?
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- Vote for the Rebel Mountain Bluebird as the next drop