How to be a lazy birder part 10
This is part 10 in a series of articles for The Lazy Birder.
- Go to your bookcase and select a book about birds.
- If you don’t have any books about birds either buy several or borrow some from your local library.
- Find a comfortable chair.
- Read the book you have chosen.
- Have a snooze if you get drowsy.
- Come back to the book at other times of laziness.
- NOTE: this activity can also be done in bed.
For 20 more useful articles on birding, click on the link below:
- How to be a birder – some hints.
Wildlifing; a great website
Michael Todd is an Australian naturalist and photographer. He has a brilliant website featuring some wonderful photos of Australian wildlife and scenery. He has photos of birds, mammals, reptiles, insects, frogs, flora and general landscapes. He has included some photos taken in other countries as well as sound recordings.
His site includes several photo essays on particular themes. He includes details of the photographic and sound recording equipment he uses. His professional projects and achievements make impressive reading; he certainly knows his stuff.
Wildlifing can be accessed by clicking here. Update: This site no longer exists. Sorry!
A lame duck
I have been writing about idioms on my writing blog. Some of these refer to birds in some way. Here is an interesting one, along with a peculiar bird observation of my own.
“A lame duckâ€Â
Meanings:
A person who is no longer effective whatever role they have. Also used in describing a failed business, enterprise or organisation.
Origins:
The origin of this saying could come from the observation that a duck with damaged or injured web feet, a lame duck, would be unable to swim properly. It could also originate from the practice of clipping a bird’s wings and thus rendering it flightless.
The first use of this term seems to have been in the London Stock Exchange in the 18th century, and it has more often been applied in recent times to the political scene. One source I discovered says this:
A lame duck (I suppose I ought to call it “flight-challengedâ€Â) is one unable to keep up with the flock and who is thus easy prey for predators. The phrase “lame duck†was first applied on the London Stock Exchange in the 18th century to brokers who could not pay their debts. Beginning in 19th-century America, “lame duck†was used to describe a Congressional representative who had failed to hornswoggle the voters into re- electing him in November, but who was not due, under the Constitution, to actually be booted out until the following March. Thus freed of even the pretense of accountability to the voters, such “lame ducks†usually voted themselves a scandalous jackpot of perks, until a stop was put to the practice by the “Lame Duck Amendment†of 1934. Today, new Congresspeople take office in January, their defeated opponents no longer have an opportunity to loot and pillage on their way out, and thus Congress has become a temple of honesty.
From The Word Detective website.
Real life example:
- Interesting, a few weeks ago I actually saw a real lame duck. We were having a picnic lunch on the banks of the River Murray in Mannum, South Australia. Two Pacific Black Ducks flew in to see if they could score a free feed. One landed normally, the other with a belly flop on to the grass. It had a damaged leg and could only shuffle along on the grass. Otherwise, it looked perfectly healthy and was obviously coping very well. That was one successful lame duck!!
Usage:
- The committee has not made a decision in over three months; it’s certainly a lame duck.
How to be a lazy birder part 9
This is the ninth article in the series for The Lazy Birder.
- This method can be used on any normal work day.
- It can be done whether you walk to work, drive a car, use a bus or train or any other means of transport.
- Get ready for work in the normal way.
- Travel to work following your normal route.
- As you travel, watch out for birds along the way.
- If driving, watch the traffic around you and only observe birds when stopped at traffic lights for example.
- If really enthusiastic, make a list of the birds you see.
Another useful series of 20 articles can be found by clicking on this link:
- How to be a birder – some hints.
Bird Word: Ear Coverts
- Ear-coverts: the small feathers that cover the area of the ear, sometimes distinctively coloured.
I don’t seem to have a photo to illustrate this exactly except for the one below of the Zebra Finch. The ear coverts would be approximately where the orange cheek patch appears.