Entertainment, Humor, Main Feed
The Best Birds on Tumblr This Week 10/30/15
So many great posts of birds make it to Tumblr every day. Here is recap of this week’s best Tumblr posts featuring birds.
Entertainment, Humor, Main Feed
So many great posts of birds make it to Tumblr every day. Here is recap of this week’s best Tumblr posts featuring birds.
This fantastic artist The Crooked Feather, has created many incredible custom bird wings for costumes and cosplays. Her latest creation of bird wings are fully articulating and move using CO2 tanks. Prices vary depending on size and complexity.
Education, Entertainment, Featured, Main Feed
A free-flight birds of prey show. I have seen hundreds of them, and I still get a wave of childlike giddiness every time I get the chance to see another one. I know I’m not the only one that believes that they are always an absolute highlight of zoo trips. There’s just something about watching a raptor soar inches above my head that takes my breath away. The speakers and trainers point, the bird flies, all of it happens in near perfect synchronization. Watching the speaker on stage, talking so calmly about the bird, engaging the audience with every syllable, it is extremely easy to believe that the entire show is effortless.
Entertainment, Humor, Main Feed
So many great posts of birds make it to Tumblr every week, so here is the first of a regular weekly recap of some of the best.
Entertainment, Featured, Humor, Main Feed, Quiz
There are hundreds of species of ducks out in the world. They come in all shapes, sizes, colors, plumages, and personalities.
What kind of duck are you most like? Take this quiz and find out!
Entertainment, Featured, Main Feed
Watch this crafty bird steal a GoPro camera in this YouTube video by Martin Lozano. This bird helps get a beautiful view of Island of … Read more
Education, Entertainment, Featured, Main Feed, videos
Hummingbirds weight about as much as a penny and fly hundreds of miles each year during migration. Watch as this tiny female Anna’s Hummingbird creates a nest for its young. It steals spider silk fibers, moss, small leaves, and other materials to strengthen the cup that it sits in.