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Dorchester, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts

ebird.org/checklist/S158535924

Birding the fields south of the Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport yielded 68 species this morning, including a few very photogenic Bobolink.

 

Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

 

ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S29951729

Happy Friday and weekend to you.

 

Play Projects

Red-collared Lorikeet (Trichoglossus rubritorquis), Eastpoint, Northern Territory, Australia

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/australia/checklist/S89183916

 

The red-collared lorikeet (Trichoglossus rubritorquis) is a species of parrot found in wooded habitats in northern Australia (north-eastern Western Australia, northern Northern Territory and far north-western Queensland). It was previously considered a subspecies of the rainbow lorikeet, but today most major authorities consider them as separate species. No other member of the rainbow lorikeet group has an orange-red collar over the nape.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-collared_lorikeet

Seen along SR 42 in the Chiricahua Moutains, AZ

Even though we were able to view this guy for about three hours he moved so fast and never stayed in the same spot for more than two seconds we were lucky to get a photo, even one as low quality as this.

 

ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S29992706

Red-vented Bulbul (Pycnonotus cafer), Noumea, New Caledonia

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/australia/checklist/S62434653

 

The red-vented bulbul (Pycnonotus cafer) is a member of the bulbul family of passerines. It is resident breeder across the Indian subcontinent, including Sri Lanka extending east to Burma and parts of Tibet. It has been introduced in many other parts of the world and has established itself in the wild on several Pacific islands including Fiji, Samoa, Tonga and Hawaii.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-vented_bulbul

Barbie: "Fashions For The 70s" Vintage Magazine Checklist 1of2 (Mattel) 1970

 

*Appeared In: Barbie Talk, Vintage Fan Club Magazine Issue Vol. 1 No. 3 May/June 1970 (Mattel)

eBird checklist S45612015. Unexpected visitor to Central Park, NYC, seen Saturday, May 12th. Great early Mother's Day gift!

Capts. Vincent Levraea and Jason Steinlicht, both pilots from the 317th Airlift Group at Dyess Air Force Base, Texas, conduct pre-flight checklists at Léopold Sédar Senghor International Airport in Dakar, Senegal, Nov. 4, 2014. The pilots are preparing to fly a sortie into Monrovia, Liberia, to deliver more than 8 tons of humanitarian aid and military supplies in support of Operation United Assistance, the U.S. Agency for International Development-led, whole-of-government effort to contain the Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Maj. Dale Greer/Released)

Gang-gang Cockatoo (Callocephalon fimbriatum), Palmdale Road, Wyong, NSW, Australia

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/checklist/S71108714

 

The gang-gang cockatoo (Callocephalon fimbriatum) is found in the cooler and wetter forests and woodlands of Australia, particularly alpine bushland. Mostly mild grey in colour with some lighter scalloping (more pronounced and buffy in females), the male has a red head and crest, while the female has a small fluffy grey crest. It ranges throughout south-eastern Australia.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gang-gang_cockatoo

Astronaut hero John Young died this weekend. May he rest in peace having ventured forth so bravely on the final frontier. I will share here the most incredible artifact I have from his space adventures — the Apollo 16 cuff checklist he wore as he took the historic jump salute 3 ft. off the lunar surface.

 

Young is the only astronaut to have flown four different spacecraft, and he was the focus of my initial space collecting interest. He is the only astronaut to have flown two missions each in the Gemini, Apollo and Shuttle programs (GT-3, GT-10, Apollo 10, Apollo 16, STS-1, STS-9/Spacelab 1). He flew the first manned Gemini mission, and even more bravely, the very first flight of the Space Shuttles (there were no unmanned test flights before his flight).

 

In his detailed book, A Man on the Moon, Andrew Chaiken describes Young: “His sharp, intuitive approach to engineering problems was well known to his colleagues. Inside, Young had an unwavering determination, an overriding sense of responsibility — to the space program, to the country, to his crew — and an almost childlike sense of wonder at the universe.” (You can see why I was smitten)

 

Astronaut Ed Lu visited him in 2011, and he relayed a couple stories about his mentor and fellow pilot, John Young: "After the first EVA on Apollo 16, he couldn't sleep, with bouts of sneezing and coughing as he had some moon dust stuck in his nose."

 

And on one of of their many flights together, as they saw a full moon rising: "Does the sight of that make you dream of going back?" "Oh yes" Young replied.

 

Chaiken concludes his book, itself a culmination of eight years of primary research, with this wish:

 

“I want us to do justice to the magnificence of the adventure that Apollo began. To live up to the promise not only of what we can achieve, but who we can become. And once we are living on the moon and venturing out across the solar system, the fact that we waited so long to resume our explorations will hardly matter. Historians of the far future may look back on Apollo and the missions that are yet to come as one great Age of Space Exploration. But in my mind’s eye it is a slow dissolve, from memory to anticipation, from what has been to what will be, from dream to dream.”

 

And by strange coincidence, I first heard of Young' passing when I was with Astronaut Chris Hadfield and former NASA Ames Director Pete Worden brainstorming the next generation of lunar exploration and settlement.

 

Hadfield followed up with this memory from their time together: John Young was a relentless dreamer engineer test pilot. He put his life on the line for what he believed in, over and over. I love what he said here: "My life has been long, and it has been interesting. It's also been a lot of fun, and a lot of hard, challenging work. If I could do it over, I would do it over the very same way. Most of it has been a marvel to me."

 

Here is a NASA video of Young's EVA 1 (his first expedition on the lunar surface, wearing this cuff checklist) and the rest of my John Young Artifacts. This one is:

Cuff P/N SEB 33100302-302 S/N 1022

Strap P/N SEB 12100030-201 S/N 1084 Assy

  

The Smithsonian has John Young's other cuff checklist (for EVA 2&3). The number of artifacts that traveled in the Lunar Module (LM) and returned to earth is few. It has been said that if you gathered all of them from all six lunar landings, other than rocks, they would fit into a small suitcase. The number of artifacts that went onto the lunar surface and returned to earth is even scarcer than LM flown items.

*Lifer*

 

20 MAY 2015

The Inn at El Canelo

Raymondville, TX

 

ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S23546483

Chestnut Teal (Anas castanea), Mole Creek, Tasmania, Australia

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist/S35344835

 

The chestnut teal (Anas castanea) is a dabbling duck found in Australia. It is protected under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chestnut_teal

viralvideohs.com/index.php/top

This is a completely FREE…no strings attached Reading Order & Checklist for the Very Best Romance Novel Authors of All Time! (Over 250 Pages.)

Authors Included in the Reading Orders & Checklists with Amazon Links Included, are…

Jude Deveraux, Julie Garwood, Danielle Steel, Bella Andre, Bella Forrest, Sandra Brown, JoJo Moyes, Lisa Jackson, Mary Balogh, Krista Lakes, Rachel Hauck, Nora Roberts/J.D. Robb, Stephanie Laurens, Judith McNaught, Carolyn Brown, Lisa Kleypas, Carolyn Brown, Julia Quinn, Kristen Hannah, Jamie McGuire, Melissa Foster, Susan Elizabeth Phillips, Mary Jo Putney, Debbie Macomber, Jayne Ann Krentz, Cindy Kirk, Georgette Heyer, Johanna Lindsey, Kathleen E. Woodiwiss, Linda Howard, Fern Michaels, Diana Gabaldon, Abbi Glines, Colleen Hoover, T.S. Joyce, J.S. Scott, J.R. Ward, & Sylvia Day.

We hope you thoroughly enjoy having this helpful & handy Reading Order & Checklist guide. Cheers!

Please feel free to share this link with all your friends!

 

Are you ready to go out? First, don't forget to check your handbag! Inside, I always take the following: plenty of cash, driver's license, car insurance documents, mobile phone, one credit card, face powder, lipstick, concealer, mascara, and a couple of safety pins in case something comes loose.

 

If this is your first time out, I'd suggest you "take" one other item with you: a practiced vocabulary. A lot of newcomers "clam up" on their first night out. They are often so terror stricken, they can't recall how to use their "fem voice". This happened to me, it has happened to others - and it could happen to you.

 

If you've ever done any public speaking you likely already know this trick. It's very important to memorize your "opening statement". From there - you can wing it.

 

If you are going to a club, you will be saying these simple phrases quite often:

 

"I'm Julie, how are you?"

"A dry white wine, please"

"Thank you, hon."

"It's nice to meet you."

"What's your name, sweetie?"

 

Practicing these common questions and responses in your fem voice, will help you get by much better in that first hour.

 

And remember - if you ever get pulled over by the police while "en femme" - don't dare fail to stop or give your proper identification. There is no law against a man driving a car in a dress. However, the law is pretty specific about lying to an police officer - you are likely to be arrested.

 

IMG_9510

1 Feb 13

The new site is live now!! It still needs lots of work, and there are a few missing links, etc. that I'll be fixing over the next few days. But, whew. :-)

 

iamneverbored.com/

Penguin Classics

Penguin Books, ca 2001

Cover Art: Cachalot Fishery (detail), Lothrop Whaling Collection, Peabody Essex Museum, Salem Mass.

Photo by Mark Sexton

 

"A complete annotated listing of Penguin Classics, Twentieth-Century Classics, Nature Classics, and the Pelican Shakespeare Series."

Chestnut-cheeked Starling (Sturnia philippensis)

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist/S31939852

 

The chestnut-cheeked starling (Agropsar philippensis) is a species of starling in the family Sturnidae. It is sometimes placed in the genus Sturnia or Sturnus. It is found in Brunei, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, North Korea, South Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines, Russia, Singapore, and Taiwan. Its natural habitat is temperate forests.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chestnut-cheeked_starling

BugShot Ecuador 2022 Checklist

 

BugShot Ecuador 2022 was an unforgettable adventure with some of the world’s most wonderful bug folks. From the cloud forest to the Amazon river system, we simply snapped non-stop for 10 days. I ended up with over 10000 photos in recording almost everything that we saw. Ecuador is a haven for exotic microfauna and our only regret was not spending more time in the field.

 

Read more...

 

25:52 - Preflight Checklist Complete: Capturing the second of a pair of doves right before it took after spending a few minutes cleaning up from a rainstorm.

Hey guys, I've wanted to make one of these for a while. If there are any mistakes please tell me. To mark off the dolls you have just put a check after the name, cross it out, or highlight it. DO NOT POST ANYWHERE ELSE!

I find this old checklist at work the other day. Was this fifteen years ago?! It kicked me in the nostalgia-balls seeing this. Remember how hard these were to find? They were only available at Target. Like TLG wasn't sure if anyone would like minifigures, lol.

 

I remember finding some, bought three or four randomly and opened them up when I got back to the car. I think I got the Cheerleader, Crash Test dummy, Zombie and the Clown? (or Wrestler?) What an absolute blast.

One of the checklist items on the tour the three of us made of the US Southwest, specifically the states around the Four Corners, was a visit to the Antelope Canyon slot canyon area just outside Page, Arizona. For years I have seen images taken in one or another of these slot canyons and promised myself that should the opportunity arise, I would go there to photograph. And I did. And it was very interesting as well as producing lovely images. But…

 

If you plan to visit these, you need to know a few things. It is a very heavily visited spot, VERY, particularly the Upper Antelope Canyon which is easily accessible for people with compromised mobility. You cannot visit except as part of a group (generally 6-10 people) under the direction of a professional Navaho tour guide (you are on private Navaho land). There are two types of tours in the upper canyon: general and photo. As of May 2017 the costs were $60 general and $130 for photo tour in the 10:00 to 14:00 tour times (best light) and a bit cheaper outside this time frame. Photo tours allow tripods, general tours do not. You spend about 1 hour in the slot plus about 15 minutes each way to and from the assembly area and the slot. Time allotment is the same for either type of tour. You are able to take photos as you pass through the slot and out the far end but are strongly discouraged from doing so as you return through the slot back to where your vehicle awaits. The slot is pretty much full of groups being shepherded by their respective guides. You have to wait for the group ahead to clear a spot and then only a small time slot in each area is available wherein you can shoot clear of people before the next group comes in. Makes no difference which type of tour you take, you are all competing for the same brief time slots, although the photo tour guides (theoretically) clear an area for the tripod carriers. All-in-all, the general tour provided us with what we needed and good high ISO performance and a very wide angle lense is your best friend here and I do not think the photo tour premium gets you much. Changing lenses here is a bad idea – too much dust/sand in the air - if you value your camera’s sensor. This is not a criticism of the tour, simply a recognition of the tourist load on the site and with that understanding, the very knowledgable guides do an excellent job in challenging circumstances, including knowing exactly which photos you need to shoot, setting up the dust-in-the-sunbeam shots or the sandfall shots, etc. You will get lots of great photos, just like all the other people getting all the same great photos. So, armed with this information, do not be dissuaded but definitely visit this iconic site. Iconic places are iconic for very good reasons. Just don’t expect free range for your artistic expression. My only suggestion is to tour the Lower Antelope Canyon which we did not visit but which is supposedly not quite as crowded but does involve climbing ladders and is not suitable for people with compromised mobility.

 

All that said, do visit Antelope Canyon if you get the chance. - JW

 

Date Taken: 2017-05-09

 

Tech Details:

 

Taken using a tripod-mounted Nikon D7100 fitted with a Nikkor 12-24mm lense set to 14mm, ISO1600 (Auto ISO at preset upper limit), Daylight WB rather than Auto to prevent canyon wall colour from fooling colour balance algorithm, Aperture priority mode, f/5.6, 1/25 sec with an EV-1.0 exposure bias re reduce risk of blowing out highlights and also to ensure suitable dark tone for walls. PP in free Open Source RAWTherapee from Nikon RAW/NEF source file: scale image to 9000x6000, set exposure to 1/2 stop above as-shot, enable the Graduated Neutral Density tool and rotate it to cover the bright sand floor to darken it for better balance with wall tones, slightly increase contrast and Chromaticity in L-A-B mode, increase vibrance slightly, enable shadows-highlights and then boost highlight recovery to bring out maximum detail in bright areas, enable luminance noise reduction and adjust to just minimize noise without noticeably sacrificing detail, sharpen, save. PP in free Open Source GIMP: set up the image on three layers, top layer is named ‘lights’, middle layer is labeled ‘darks’, and also the ‘main’ layer for the rest of the image, use the threshold tool on a copy of the base image to isolate the brightest 30% of the image and copy this to the mask portion of the lights layer, use the threshold tool on a copy of the base image to isolate the darkest 20% of the image and copy this to the mask portion of the darks layer and then adjust the dark areas to recover detail and get a good representation of its tonality, and then slightly adjust the contrast and exposure of the main portion to get a good representation of the slot walls without impacting the light or dark portions of the image, create new working layer from visible result, adjust overall contrast slightly and then adjust colour balance to remove a very slight green cast, (did not sharpen as it would simply accentuate noise), save, scale image to 6000x4000, sharpen slightly, add fine black-and-white frame, add bar and text on left, save, scale image to 1800 wide for posting, sharpen slightly, save.

If you're like me, and I know you are, then you're obsessed with Boba Fett and his slick Mandalorian battle armor! So I put together this handy dandy Mandalorian Checklist poster to recap all of Hasbro's awesome reimaginations of mister Fett.

 

I was on the fence about including the McQuarrie Concept Armor Fett or the Rohlan Dyre character because neither of these figures are wearing the "classic" commando armor we all know and love, but I ultimately included them because, well, they're cool. Photos courtesy of Rebelscum.com ... until I can take my own (I'm still missing about six of these blokes myself).

 

Enjoy!

Sunset from the top of Butts Brow, above Eastbourne, East Sussex.

 

Rational for title, is

- Don't let your daughter borrow your tripod

- Then bump the ISO to 800 and forget, when you use your camera bag for support.

 

So remember the checklist.

 

I am rather pleased with the noise levels in this, my 50D would have had way to much noise at this ISO. The 5D II from my POV did amaziningly well controlling this.

 

On Camera stuff:

- Lee 0.9 ND hard grad

 

Post Processing:

- Adjusted WB in ACR

- Levels adjustments in CS4

- Un-sharp mask in CS4

 

This is best viewed in Lightroom on Black --- Press "L"

 

Canon 5D Mk II with EF 17-40mm L lens @17mm, ISO 800, 0.3 secs at f/11, Lee 0.9 hard ND grad.

 

www.ukbutterflies.co.uk/species.php?species=c-album

  

Comma

 

Polygonia c-album (po-lee-GOH-nee-uh see-AL-bum)

 

Wingspan

50 - 64mm

 

Checklist Number

59.031

 

Family:NymphalidaeRafinesque, 1815

 

Subfamily:NymphalinaeRafinesque, 1815

 

Tribe:NymphaliniRafinesque, 1815

 

Genus:PolygoniaHübner, [1819]

 

Subgenus:

 

Species:c-album(Linnaeus, 1758)

 

Subspecies:c-album(Linnaeus, 1758)

 

Form:c-album(Linnaeus, 1758)

hutchinsoniRobson, 1881

  

Introduction

 

Looking like a tatty Small Tortoiseshell, the Comma is now a familiar sight throughout most of England and Wales and is one of the few species that is bucking the trend by considerably expanding its range. The butterfly gets its name from the only white marking on its underside, which resembles a comma. When resting with wings closed this butterfly has excellent camouflage, the jagged outline of the wings giving the appearance of a withered leaf, making the butterfly inconspicuous when resting on a tree trunk or when hibernating.

This butterfly was once widespread over most of England and Wales, and parts of southern Scotland, but by the middle of the 1800s had suffered a severe decline that left it confined to the Welsh border counties, especially West Gloucestershire, East Gloucestershire, Herefordshire and Monmouthshire. It is thought that the decline may have been due to a reduction in Hop farming, a key larval foodplant at the time. Since the 1960s this butterfly has made a spectacular comeback, with a preference for Common Nettle as the larval foodplant, and it is now found throughout England, Wales, the Isle of Man and the Channel Islands and has recently reached Scotland. There have also been a few records from Ireland.

 

Polygonia c-album ssp. c-album f. c-album

This species was first defined in Linnaeus (1758) as shown here (type locality: Sweden).

The nominate form is found throughout its range.

  

Polygonia c-album ssp. c-album f. hutchinsoni

 

This form was first defined in Robson (1881).

This form is found throughout its range and represents individuals that go on to produce a second brood, which differ from those individuals that overwinter as follows:

1. Overall appearance much paler.

2. The underside is especially paler, being yellow-brown with darker markings nearer the body, and with a few green spots and other marks at the wing margins.

Polygonia c-album ssp. c-album f. hutchinsoni (Robson, 1881)

The specimens emerging in early Summer are much paler in hue that those appearing later: the ground colour is about the same as the palest portion of the darker specimens, and all the other markings are paler in proportion. On the underside the differences are even more noticeable, the early form being pale yellow-brown, with rather darker markings towards the base, and a few green spots and marks near the hind margins of both wings.

The Summer form is so different, and so constant in its appearance, that it ought to have a distinctive name, and we suggest it be called var. Hutchinsoni, in compliment to that lady whose liberality has enriched so many cabinets with specimens; whose knowledge of the species, as has already been said, is not exceeded by that of any one living, and to whom we are greatly indebted for information mentioned above.

  

Conservation Status

 

The Comma is one of the few species that is thriving which is believed to be linked to global warming. Its range has been continually expanding and it has recently reached Scotland where it hasn't been seen since around 1870. As such, this is not a species of conservation concern.

  

Habitat

 

This is primarily a woodland butterfly, where it can be seen along woodland rides and country lanes. However, especially in late summer, the butterfly is frequently seen in gardens where it feeds in on nectar sources to build up its fat reserves before entering hibernation.

  

Life Cycle

 

The butterfly can be seen at any time of the year, occasionally awakening on warm winter days. The butterfly emerges from hibernation in March, giving rise to the next generation which appear at the end of June and start of July. The majority of the offspring have dark undersides and these go on to hibernate. However, the remainder of the offspring have quite light undersides and brighter uppersides, and are known as the form hutchinsoni.

This form is named after Emma Hutchinson who discovered that this form goes on to breed and produce another generation that then overwinter. As a result, there is another peak emergence in late summer, at the end of August and start of September. The trigger for the development of this form is the changing day length as the larva develops. If day length is increasing (before midsummer's day) as the larva develops, then the majority of adults will be the hutchinsoni form that go on to produce another generation, whereas if day length is decreasing, then the majority of adults will be the regular dark form that enter hibernation. The assumption, therefore, is that a good spring will allow for an earlier emergence and more-rapid larval development, resulting in a high proportion of hutchinsoni adults which can then comfortably fit in another brood.

  

Imago

 

After emerging from hibernation, both sexes search out nectar sources, such as Sallow flowers or Blackthorn blossom. They also spend a good amount of time basking, favourite surfaces being tree trunks, wood piles, dead bracken and fence posts.

The male butterfly sets up a territory, often on the sunny side of a woodland margin or at the junction of two woodland rides. Here he will sit on a favourite perch awaiting a passing female and will fly up to investigate any passing insect. The male will also make short flights - always returning to the same perch. Even when disturbed, the male will fly off for several metres or so before predictably returning to exactly the same leaf. When egg-laying the female makes short fluttering flights over the foodplant, stopping every few feet, landing on the foodplant and, if suitable, laying a single green egg.

Those adults that hibernate take a good deal of nectar, building up essential fat reserves that will see them through the winter. They are often seen feeding from garden flowers or fruit, such as blackberries or fallen plums. They eventually search out woodland where they find a suitable location in which to hibernate such as a tree trunk, branch, hollow tree or log pile.

Adults feed primarily on Thistles (Cirsium spp. and Carduus spp.). Bramble (Rubus fruticosus), Ivy (Hedera helix), Knapweeds (Centaurea spp.) and Privet (Ligustrum vulgare) are also used.

  

Ovum

 

Eggs are laid singly on the foodplant, toward the edge of a leaf upperside, each female laying up to 275 eggs. They are normally laid on plants at the margins of woods, in woodland glades and rides or next to a hedgerow. Eggs are green when first laid but eventually turn yellow and ultimately grey just before hatching. This stage lasts between 2 and 3 weeks, depending on temperature.

  

Larva

 

On emerging, the young larva moves to the underside of a leaf where it feeds. As it matures it feeds on the upperside of the leaf and is quite unmistakable, resembling a bird dropping. This stage lasts around 5 weeks, depending on temperature. Larvae of the first brood moult 4 while those of the second brood moult 3 times.

The primary larval foodplant is Common Nettle (Urtica dioica). Currants (various) (Ribes spp.), Elms (various) (Ulmus spp.), Hop (Humulus lupulus) and Willows (various) (Salix spp.) are also used.

  

Pupa

 

The pupa is suspended head down, attached by the cremaster, to either the foodplant, surrounding vegetation or some other suitable platform. The pupa is quite beautiful and the green and brown colouring augmented with a small number of subtle silver spots, together with a jagged outline, give a superb impression of a withered leaf. This stage lasts around 2 weeks.

  

I captured this ladybug at the CSU Annual Flower Trial Garden in Fort Collins, Colorado. (Zuiko 50mm macro, f/8.0, 1/640 sec., 400 ISO, extension tube, handheld)

San Juan Island - American Camp

Friday Harbor, Washington

 

September 12, 2014

 

ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S19809111

Cockatiel (Nymphicus hollandicus), Bourke, NSW, Australia

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/australia/checklist/S72565345

 

The cockatiel (Nymphicus hollandicus), also known as weiro bird, or quarrion, is a small parrot that is a member of its own branch of the cockatoo family endemic to Australia.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cockatiel

#bucketlist checklist activities!

How about 3 pools, tallest #waterslide in the region, #zipline overlooking airport runway, #bungee #freefall overlooking #panoramicviews of #chaweng beach and lake?

Yellow-throated Scrubwren (Sericornis citreogularis intermedius), Ourimbah, NSW, Australia

 

Ebird checklist:

ebird.org/view/checklist/S48493694

 

A small ground-dwelling bird that inhabits wet forest or rainforest, it is insectivorous. The bird has a distinctive yellow throat and eyebrow. The male face is black and the female brown.

 

Source: Wikipedia

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow-throated_scrubwren

Each time I go to trip I miss something, so I started to build my own travel checklist.....

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