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Every bird has a story. Have you ever watched a Crow eat crackers? Have you seen a Quail's topknot bounce around while it runs? Have you considered what the life of a headless Chicken is like? I have. I enjoy letting the beauty of Orioles, Ducks, and Kingfishers streak colours across my mind. I like to indulge in questioning the existence of Thunderbirds or the extinction of the Dodo. It's not often you hear these tales, considering few birds can speak (and the rest shouldn't) but this is where I come in. I've considered getting drunk with Zebra Finches, contemplated what Flamingo meat might taste like, and wondered if I could train Pileated Woodpeckers to kill for me. So, I present to you: Bird Droppings. Fifty stories about birds, from the speculative to the absurd, plus a couple extras for the keen-eyed. My brain droppings in regards to birds, if you will. Enjoy.
Pete Dunne, one of the foremost birding writers in the country, shares 33 funny, poignant, whimsical, and informative tales about birders and birding in his first collection of birding essays in more than ten years. Dunne is an expert birder, sought-after teacher, and popular author Includes wonderful illustrations by David Gothard
Kathleen Smith offers information about bird droppings. Smith recommends that owners of pet birds should watch their bird's droppings to monitor the health of the bird. Characteristics of abnormal and normal droppings are discussed.
Collection of close-up photographic images of bird droppings
The first scholarly treatment of ornithological dejecta, commonly known as bird droppings.
This art photography book reflects the creative mind of a 97-year-old retiree in Delray Beach, Florida. Uniquely, he has spotted amazing likenesses of dogs, cats, human faces, deer, and zombies, among others, in the dried excrement of waterfowl in a southern Florida wetlands reserve.