Upside Down in Down Under
Galahs are prolific in this country and we get quite a few hanging around our back yard.
Literally and figuratively!
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Galahs are prolific in this country and we get quite a few hanging around our back yard.
Literally and figuratively!
They sure like your clothesline,I bet Ms. Muppet likes them if she’s still into pink everything.
She gets even more at her place.
Maybe you should right your country so the poor birds don’t have so much trouble knowing which way is up?
Give it another 12 hours and we’ll be right side up again.
I feel sorry for Sammy. His youthful memories are saying: “WOW! What a feast!” and his poor old body is saying: “Would y’all please go away and let me nap in peace.”
You are right there. He’s very slow now and just ignores all the birds and they know it too and just walk all around him.
They are such cheery birds, we get more Kookaburras and Rosella’s here and a group we call ‘happy birds’ that go around in flocks of 20 or so, very cheerful and very noisy, and then we have Satin Bower Birds, and my comments there are not printable in public, but I love waking to bird chatter
We had friends from the UK staying once and they were amazed by the prolific bird-life even in an urban area such as ours.
When I was staying with friends in Brisbane, a huge flock of noisy galahs flew over the house every morning and back again every evening, you could set your clock by them!
Except that alarm clock was probably set to an ungodly hour.
My daily visitor is a Gila Woodpecker, when he’s not stealing sweet water from the hummingbird feeders he’s pecking holes in our house. Damn woodpecker!
That pesky Woody Woodpecker.
MERRY CHRISTMAS to you and yours, DB!!
Same to you, Wil.