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Snow Geese migrate long distances, stopping at traditional stopover and
wintering areas. Ornithologists generally agree that they are
Scarlet-fronted Parakeets, thousands of miles away from their native
Central America.<br>
But how did that old legend get started, that storks bring babies?<br>
Yet not one of these iridescent-black, yellow-billed starlings is native
to the Americas. With names like the Screaming Piha, the Blue-crowned
Motmot, and the Black-necked Red-Cotinga, these are not your average
birds.<br>
In the Amazon, heat and humidity weigh upon you and a cacophony of
birdcalls surrounds you. Parakeets in the wild?<br>
These daring blue dandies sound the alarm in evergreen and mixed conifer
forests, parks and yards. According to myth, Thunderbird was so large
and flew so high, it carried the rain on its back and created lightning
and thunder. But the supply is limited.<br>
Such labels are not used by ornithologists, but they add a bit of fun to
the study of birds. One crow is just a crow.<br>
So they called this one a Robin, too. Local guides, including those that
specialize in birds, are often listed in travel books or are available
through hotels or nature preserves. But a cavalry regiment from
Wisconsin actually had an eagle that accompanied it during the Civil
War.<br>
Since December, this pair has been hooting back and forth regularly at
night. Long-necked and long-legged, these grayish cranes stand three
feet tall. High in a leafless cottonwood sits a female Great Horned Owl,
her broad head sporting two ear-like tufts. They stop to forage, then
move on. Does the image of a frozen birdbath bring to mind a small
yellow bird with ice skates?<br>
One stretches out its neck, and the groomer, or preener, twirls
individual feathers in its beak, often starting at the back of the head
and working around to the front. Suddenly a flock of hundreds of birds
rises from the ground beneath the apple trees, swarming in tight
formation, wing-tip to wing-tip.<br>
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