The first bird may not look too strange from the front:
Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl |
The next peculiar bird is actually the bird on the Asa Wright Nature Centre logo.
It's a Bearded Bellbird. "Bearded" for its grayish 'beard' and "Bellbird" for the 'gong - gong - gong' sound it makes!
Not far away, on the same trail, there is another odd bird. It's not at all bizarre in appearance, in fact, it's kind of cute.
It also has a sign.
It's a very small bird that, like the Bellbird, has 'bearded' in its name. White Bearded Manakin. What makes it bizarre is the courtship behavior it performs and the sound it makes while doing so. Along the trail, we come to the 'lek' or mating ground, which is marked off with a rope fence.
Mukesh, our guide, points out a spot where a male manakin has been cleaning the area of leaves and tells us to watch for the little white birds to do their 'dance'.
Sure enough, we see several birds which flit back and forth from one small tree trunk to another. Even more bizarre than what they are doing is the sound they are making... a noise kind of like the sound of an electric spark.
At least it wasn't as dark there as it was in the home of the next bizarre birds. A few days later, we followed Mukesh down a trail and into the Dunston Cave to see Oilbirds!
The Oilbirds are quite famous at Asa Wright Nature Centre, since it is the only known easily accessible colony. You can read the sanctuary's article about them by clicking here. We were lucky enough to be such a small group (just my husband and I, with our guide) that we were allowed to quietly enter the cave. Mukesh briefly pointed his flashlight around the ledges of the cave so we could see them.
In the above photo, their eyes were glowing from the reflection of the light.
While it's hard to get any kind of scale from the photos, these are not small birds. Their wingspan measures 3 and a half feet!
A pair of baby Oilbirds |
The last two bizarre birds were residents of the island of Tobago. In fact, the next one is the national bird of that place. I mean no disrespect when I label it bizarre. Maybe I should use the definition of "extra-ordinary" this time for bizarre. They certainly have an extra-ordinary song.
The photo above shows where the 'rufous-vented' part of their name come from.
Okay, this post maybe be rather bizarre, but I still have one more bird to show you. Don't you agree with me that these Flamingoes fit the description as well?
I do think they are beautiful (actually, I'd say all these bizarre birds are beautiful in some way)... but they are also strange, peculiar, odd, funny, and curious as well!
Just look at their beaks, their necks, their backward-bending knees... you get the idea! They were just amazing to see though, and I'm sure God had His reasons for each of their bizarre features. *wink* wink*
Thanks for sharing these pictures and stories. I've really enjoyed seeing/hearing about everything from your birding adventure! :-)
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you are enjoying them Sara. Thanks for your comment.
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