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Pelican Yoga Posts

Carnabys: “expected” & “unexpected” behaviour

 

Australia has six black cockatoo species.

All are intelligent, sociable, spectacularly agile, and have very powerful beaks.

The world’s only two white-tailed black cockatoo species – both endangered – are endemic to southwest Western Australia.

My beloved and I are lucky enough to see and hear one of them – Carnaby’s Black Cockatoo – on hundreds of occasions, every year.

The featured image shows behaviour which is very familiar to us.

The other photos show something “new”, at least to us.

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Hope

 

Hope is the thing with feathers
That perches in the soul,
And sings the tune without the words,
And never stops at all…

So begins a justly celebrated poem by Emily Dickinson.

In this post “hope” is viewed through photographic, musical and poetic “lenses”.

 

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Carnabys, flying

 

 

(Sequel to immediately-preceding post. If you are new to Pelican Yoga, please see/read that post before you explore this one)

This post’s cockatoos were not playing “Banksia rugby”, but they were members of the same flock, and also part of our “late arvo Carnabys Encounter” on 15 September 2021, just outside Cape Arid National Park’s northwestern edge.

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Pelican power (“Lake Monger 01.01.2022” series finale)

 

The wing’s shape is such that it can push effectively against the air, and also generate lift as it moves forwards, but that is no use without a very powerful downstroke to capture the air in the first place, and this is where muscular strength comes in.

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