This is an ostrich. She is very happy that she’s neither a turkey or a pig. She wasn’t made for eating, but so people could see how beautiful she is. Especially her eyelashes.
Enjoy your holiday!
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This is an ostrich. She is very happy that she’s neither a turkey or a pig. She wasn’t made for eating, but so people could see how beautiful she is. Especially her eyelashes.
Enjoy your holiday!
Have you ever been accused of being a sloth? Above is a picture I took this week at the zoo: a sweet little sleeping sloth. Cute, yes? And there are good reasons that sloths move slowly. Very slowly.
It’s all about their metabolism and digestive process.
Sloths are classified as folivores as the bulk of their diet consists mostly of buds, tender shoots, and leaves, mainly of Cecropia trees. Some two-toed sloths have been documented as eating insects, small reptiles and birds as a small supplement to their diet. Yum!
Leaves, their main food source, provide very little energy or nutrition and do not digest easily. Sloths therefore have very large, specialized, slow-acting stomachs with multiple compartments in which symbiotic bacteria break down the tough leaves.
As much as two-thirds of a well-fed sloth’s body-weight consists of the contents of its stomach, and the digestive process can take a month or more to complete. Wikipedia.
Recently I went to a nearby industrial park in Glendale that has some beautiful water birds. So far this fall I’ve only seen mallard ducks. This summer the pond was drained and left for awhile, and just recently did the mallards show up. I’m hoping the white-crested ducks make an appearance, and some gorgeous geese, but it probably depends on the management of the park. Unless they are independent, and park wherever they want.
Come to think of it, there were a couple of ducks in my back yard about five years ago. So who knows? Maybe the other ducks and geese have been up in the mountains during the summer. Can’t blame them.
The word duck comes from Old English *duce “diver”, a derivative of the verb *ducan “to duck, bend down low as if to get under something, or dive”, because of the way many species in the dabbling duck group feed by upending (Wikipedia).
Mallards are beautiful creatures. The males are especially beautiful, but a thorough look at the females reveals a dignified, design-rich beauty as well. Just more subdued.
Wikipedia says that some people use “duck” specifically for adult females and “drake” for adult males, while others use “hen” and “drake,” respectively.
A duckling is a young duck in downy plumage or baby duck; but in the food trade young adult ducks ready for roasting are sometimes labeled “duckling.”
“Ducks are generally monogamous,” says Wikipedia, “although these bonds generally last a single year only. Larger species and the more sedentary species (like fast river specialists) tend to have pair-bonds that last numerous years. Most duck species breed once a year, choosing to do so in favourable conditions (spring/summer or wet seasons). Ducks also tend to make a nest before breeding.”
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