TWO BIRDS
Heron by the boat house
Young family
Heron and fresco
Lost feather
Pigeon and cliffs
A London scene
Rear view
Meeting of species
Small bird
Gull and shadow
Gull and dinghy
Resting by the water's edge
Heron reflected
Swan reflected
Heron
Bird of prey
Cock-a-doodle-dog
Bird on balustrade
Heron there
Distant heron
Bird on a chair
Jubilee sunset
Flutter
Water bird
Take off
Bird and branch
The Dove
Bird and beans
Small bird
Gliding
Bird of Prey
Bird eating berries
I wonder...
Flight at sunset
Brown swan
Bird on a branch
Night flight
Bird on a boat
Birds and beast
Birds of a feather
Owl and organ
Mandarin
Ducking
Almazens Cunha
Ducks and drops
On the grass
Plumage
Acrobatic
Looking away
White bird
Green Parrot
Flight of fancy
In flight
Take off or landing
Seabirds
Bird on a feather
Boy with owl
Ibrahim Rauza
Bird
Wading
Triumvirate
Great curves
Orme Square Eagle
Mandarin profile
Quack
Head in the blossom
Green and pink
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WATCHING
It gives me great pleasure and a sense of wellbeing watching the ducks, moorhens, geese, swans, seagulls, and other fowl, swimming in or sitting close to the water bodies on London's parks.
Sometimes, I have spotted rarer birds such as herons, cormorants, and pelicans (in St James Park). Golders Hill Park in northwest London used to have flamingos. I do not know if they are still there, but hope they are.
I often wonder what the birds think about the humans, who come to visit them, that is if they, the fowl, think at all. Are we good company for them or simply an occasional source of welcome food waste?
It does not matter to me whether or not they think, so long as they are there to give us all a pleasurable experience and that they are enjoying life in an avian kind of way.
Sometimes, I have spotted rarer birds such as herons, cormorants, and pelicans (in St James Park). Golders Hill Park in northwest London used to have flamingos. I do not know if they are still there, but hope they are.
I often wonder what the birds think about the humans, who come to visit them, that is if they, the fowl, think at all. Are we good company for them or simply an occasional source of welcome food waste?
It does not matter to me whether or not they think, so long as they are there to give us all a pleasurable experience and that they are enjoying life in an avian kind of way.
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