LOL, it looks like it doesn't it? We've had some other funny animal pictures through the years, mostly with deer but the turkeys can do some wacky things too. We have one camera that watches the only road coming in and one time there was probably 30 turkeys that were walking along in a perfectly straight line. I labeled that one "marching orders".
I would like to see new examples of old designs, similar to how they did the new dime, designed by Esao Andrews. My preference on coinage in general going forward would be to eliminate the nickel and quarter and add a five-dollar coin, make the half the size of today's nickel and eliminate $1- and $5-dollar bills. On the obverse put a full profile of Liberty on the half with a seated Liberty one-dollar coin and standing/striding Liberty on the five-dollar coin. Incorporating the shields, staffs, caps, flags, bells on the obverse works well, could even combine the eagle on the larger coins, leaving more room for new designs/styles on the reverse.
I like the logic, but I figure the quarter is the one coin nobody will be willing to get rid of. That makes it hard to get rid of nickels, unless you also get rid of dimes. Looking at historical buying power, there's a strong case for doing that - for making the quarter the smallest circulating denomination. But nobody's ready to admit that. Yet.
I agree with you. As much as I like coin roll hunting (with nickels being by far my favorite), I think having the quarter as the smallest denominator would be smart. I think having only the quarter, half dollar, and dollar as coins would work fine while getting rid of the one dollar bill as well. I don't foresee introducing a $2 or $5 coin as going anywhere since so many transactions are now cashless. I would suggest simply using what we have.
The logic behind keeping the dime is that you simply drop the hundredths place on all pricing - everything would be in tenths. This would still allow sales tax for those states without any issues. It also keeps the decimal system in play; going to quarters goes back to the old piece-of-eight logic. Keep in mind, the dime would become the new cent, only used in return change from purchases. The real beauty of this logic is that the seigniorage would be greatly improved - the mint would profit on all coin production.