bird

  • Huddled Together

    Huddled Together

    Six bee-eaters huddle together to stay warm on a cold winter morning….

  • Crosswords : Birds of Prey

    Crosswords : Birds of Prey

    Birds of Prey Crossword – Be in the first 10 to solve & we will display your name on this post.

  • Bird Sightings at Forest Hut

    Bird Sightings at Forest Hut

    Couple of bird sighting experiences & bird sighting checklist at Forest Hut…

  • Black-Crowned Night Heron

    Black-Crowned Night Heron

    The Black-Crowned Night Heron, is a medium-sized heron found throughout a large part of the world, including parts of Eurasia and America. They primarily eat small fish, leeches, frogs, other amphibians, snakes, small mammals, small birds, eggs, carrion.

  • Killdeer

    Killdeer

    The Killdeer is a large plover found in the Americas. It primarily feeds on insects, although other invertebrates and seeds are eaten.

  • Mourning Dove

    Mourning Dove

    The Mourning Dove is a member of the dove family. It is one of the most abundant and widespread species of all North American birds. This species’ call is a distinctive, plaintive cooOOoo-wooo-woo-woooo.

  • Lilac-Breasted Roller

    Lilac-Breasted Roller

    The Lilac-breasted Roller is an African bird of the roller family. The diet of the lilac-breasted roller consists of arthropods and small vertebrates, including ground-dwelling insects, spiders, scorpions, centipedes and millipedes, snails, and a variety of small vertebrates, including small birds. Slow-moving lizards, chameleons and snakes.

  • Red-Tailed Black Cockatoo

    Red-Tailed Black Cockatoo

    The red-tailed black cockatoo is a large black cockatoo native to Australia. Although red-tailed black cockatoos feed on a wide variety of native and introduced grains, the mainstay of their diet is eucalyptus seeds.

  • Storm Petrel

    Storm Petrel

    The Ashy Storm Petrel is a small seabird family Hydrobatidae. It breeds colonially on islands off the coasts of California and Mexico. Endangered.