View allAll Photos Tagged Inca
Cyanocorax yncas.
Inca Jay is now split from the Green Jays of North America, and the latin name has stayed with the Inca Jay !
They are more usually found at the edges of forests, rather than deep in the heart of the trees...
on the steep hillside, which are still in use today. They created the terraces by hauling richer topsoil by hand from the lower lands. The terraces enabled the production of surplus food, more than would normally be possible at altitudes as high as 11,000 feet.
On the hills of Inca ruins at Pisac and the entrance to the Sacred Valley
An advert for Inca Kola, the yellow fizzy soft drink from Peru. Apparently Peru is only one of two countries in the World where Coca Cola isn't the number one drink. In Peru it is Inca Kola, in Scotland it is Irn Bro which actually has a very similar taste.
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Collared Inca (Coeligena torquata) photographed on October 26th, 2018 at the Guango Lodge near Papallacta, Ecuador.
The Inca jay is 29.5–30.5 cm (11.6–12.0 in) in length. The crown can appear mostly white, with blue limited to the frontal crest and nape. A black bib forms a broad band up to the sides of the head as well as a stripe through the eye line and one above it. The breast and underparts typically are bright yellow. The upper parts are rich green. The color of the iris is bright yellow.
This one was photographed in Ecuador guided by Neotropic Photo Tours.
2012...ayer
"Enterradores de Descampao"
Enganche a distancia con HOT que subirá ahora su parte...echarle un ojo a su Flickr
www.flickr.com/photos/hot147/6956519842/in/photostream
Gracias por el impulso,gran idea su Hottie!
EDSick
WCandie
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More soon....more soon...
more soon...
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Shouts out to BONIM(cuñao), CADE y JOHE(MadTri!)
FROM THE INTERNET:
This common Southwest species is one of the most desert-adapted of the family. Its plump body can survive both extreme heat and cold. They can go four or five days without drinking, and fly 10 or more miles to reach a water hole.
Their melodious "hoo hoo" repeated up to 30 times a minute fills the air during early summer. These doves are almost always seen in pairs. Their scaly appearance sets them apart from other small doves. In the winter, Inca doves gather in flocks of up to 50. On cold winter days they have been known to form pyramids 2 or 3 tiers high in order to stay warm.
The Inca Tern is found along the coasts of Chile and Peru, near the waters of the Humboldt current. Truly a strikingly beautiful bird.
The collared inca is a species of hummingbird found in humid Andean forests from western Venezuela, through Colombia and Ecuador, to Peru and Bolivia. It is very distinctive and unique in having a white chest-patch and white on the tail.
This one was photographed in Ecuador guided by Neotropic Photo Tours.
INCA + YELOW + HOT TASER + JANFREE
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basado en el videoclip de SKRILLEX_FIRST OF THE YEAR
www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cXDgFwE13g
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EDS 2012, tha click!
Have a look on big size, much better.
You only see the reddish colored feathers on Inca doves when they open their wings wide. I rarely seem to be quick enough to capture the moment when that brilliant flash of color shows through. But my luck was true on this day as I caught the moment twice. They seem like fairly plain little birds until then.
Inca doves, Montell, Uvalde County, Texas during February 2020
Palacio de Inca Rocca
Calle de Hatunrumiyoc (Piedra de los doce ángulos).- Muro del palacio de Inca Roca, sobre el que se levanta un edificio público virreinal. Es muy propio de la ciudad Imperial las construcciones castellanas sobre muros inca.
Calleja estrecha muy concurrida por el detalle de aquella piedra a medio camino de esta larga y estrecha vÃa que es acceso a la cuesta de San Blas