Bird Watching Club
Comments
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I took these through my dirty patio door today. I have'nt seen these little guys for quite some time.
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Nancy BW, I love the woody shots. The little fellow who pck outside my window ( or his Mrs.) got stuck on the bars of the feeder today. Don't know how he managed that. I thought for a few seconds I was going to have to rescue him but he got sorted out and was back a few minutes later.
I am glad the little cat bird was OK. What I love about having a feeder at the window is sometimes I can stand right next to the bolder birds without them flying off. They do indeed have wonderful eyes and expressions. I always find their delicacy so beautiful and fascinating when I can get right up close and just watch them. I remember many years ago the blind was open on my bedroom window which was a good size patio door and I put a new green cover on the comforter. The birds started flying at the window thinking it was a lawn. They were ok and quickly realized and stopped but it was a strange surprise.
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The following was taken from on-line.
This sea turtle in the Southern Great Barrier Reef is over 100 years old.
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Wow, Teka, fascinating photo. I bet he would have some tales to tell if he could speak!
Just did a google. There was a flamingo that lived to 83 and some parrots can live to their 80s in captivity. There was also a crane over 80. Apparently there is a jellyfish that never dies!!
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A turtle so old moss is growing on it. Or is that a chia pet? LOL Great pic Teka.
Lizzysmom, Glad your little bird got unattached to the perch. When my cat was a kitten she found herself in some real predicaments and me about having a heart attack. Your story reminded me of some of her escapades.
I know parrots can live for a very long time but the crane and flamingo surprised me.
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I put this together..the life cycle of a flamingo...not the end though
I just love watching them at the San Diego zoo...
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Lisa, a lovely composite of flamingoes. The closest I have ever come to a pink flamingo is all the plastic ones that people put in their yards as a joke for someone's birthday. I am not sure if that is a regional tradition or not.
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The following was taken from on-line.
The oldest living parrot is Cookie, a Major
Mitchell's cockatoo (Cacatua leadbeateri) of Brookfield Zoo, Illinois,
USA, who was at least 80 years 107 days old as of 15 September 2014.Cookie's exact age was unknown when he arrived at
Brookfield Zoo in May 1934. His arrival was documented in a ledger dated
May 1934, when he was estimated to be at least one year old. The zoo
gave him a “hatch date" of 30 June 1933, which would make Cookie 81
years 77 days old.
Because the precise day in May was not documented, the age calculation
in this record is taken from the final day of that month (although the
parrot may have been a full 30 days older if his arrival had been on 1st
May).Cookie (June 30, 1933 – August 27, 2016)
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They sure do- Im always amazed to see them here. There are quite a few nesting areas out here in the suburbs surprisingly. I back up to a pond, it really a retention pond, but there have always been egret and heron sightings. Theyve been treating the algae the last few years and Ive seen fewer- I think it might affect the fish population, which sucks.
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I would stop to see cookie, back when you were able to still see her, when we would take the kids to the zoo. Beautiful peeper!!
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No doubt, pampered. ;o)
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This is a red tail hawk that my friend, a police department animal warden, collected on duty. He is ill somehow and was eating road kill, unable to hunt on his own. She took him to an area wildlife center to be nursed back to health.
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yippee finally some yellow finches found my sock feeder
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Look at the hawk talons!
We've never been able to get goldfinches to come to a sock feeder.
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I put it next to my regular old bird feeder. Maybe the birds spread the word
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Lisa, I think those are my birds that left Illinois for a warmer climate. I used to have the goldfinches all the time on my sock feeders and then last winter they stopped coming and then this summer they would fly on it and not stay. So it is funny what moves them to do the things they do.
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The parrot and the hawk are neat pictures. I am not sure if I would want to hold on to a hawk. I had one today fly right in front of me very low to the ground and it was obviously after something.
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when I was on an Alaskan cruise, I was just standing on the deck early one morning when a bald eagle flew very fast right at my face. Luckily at the last minute he aborted his flight and veered off. Scared the living daylights out of me.
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My favorite photo of DS is the one where his hair is in a pony tail and he's holding a sharp shinned hawk while they're banding him.
Lisa, know what you mean. Eagles close up are pretty scary.
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Wren, You will be happy to know that I ran your suggestion by my oncologist about taking my Arimidex at night instead of in the morning. The situation was if my abdominal ultrasound came back normal then he wanted me to touch base with him again and we would stop the drug to see if my symptoms went away. The US did come back normal and he said it would be fine to take the drug in the evening so tonight is going to be the trial one on this. I am hoping this will work. Thanks for the suggestion.
Lisa, I would be scared to death if I saw an eagle about to collide with me. I forget who posted on here recently that mentioned the famous eagle was going to be on Letterman. I actually took a really bad picture of it. I'll see if I can find it. I took it right off the TV.
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Vanderbilt Beach, Naples FL
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Found this little guy on the way home too - sorry not a bird but too cute to pass up
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I love turtles. Have always found them cute since I was small!!
Oh Ladies, I am kicking myself so hard. I generally keep my small camera in my purse. I charged the battery Tuesday night but just had a slight feeling that maybe it wasn't charging, then decided it was and dismissed it. On Wednesday I went for a quick walk down the back parking lot at work at lunchtime.I left my camera at my desk as it was a horrible rainy day There pecking around and waiting for prey was the most stunning falcon. He was beautiful and not bothered by me. I hurried back to the office, got my camera and returned. He was still there posing perfectly, no more that 12 ft away and then...... the battery was flat!!! Aghhhh! (My cellphone is useless) I looked for him yesterday but no joy. I ALWAYS charge my batteries and have spares except to photograph the best bird I have ever seen close to in the wild.
Well here instead are the geese crossing the road at work, not what I was hoping for... and I need new wiper blades.
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Lovely photos of birds and turtle photo! ;o)
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MJ, Nice pics. Love the beach with the gull and the turtle. That turtle is something I don't see very often around here.
Lizzysmom, What a disappointment not to get a falcon of all things! That is really a sharp picture through your windshield! About once a year the Canada geese have a family reunion in my backyard and there will be around 100 of them. There is an open field adjacent to my backyard and they start in that field and then when they realize there is bird food and water in my yard they come into my yard. What a mess!!!!!
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Yes, bird poop!!
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Teka, if you want a laugh.............. I was out in my front yard gardening a few years ago and I heard the infamous Canada geese flying low overhead. The split second I looked up and then down I just had this awful feeling of what was going to happen next. Yes, you guessed it. I got showered with green poop all over me!!!! Talk about gross. Now when this happens I make a beeline to my garage for cover. LOL
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Yuck!
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