Saturday, August 7, 2010

The Red Bishop last year - Maree

I get to enjoy the tranquillity and peace of mind that results from watching colourful birds flitter around my lawn or deer grazing in my neighbour's pasture field.
- Rick Rouse, from Why I Love Country Living




In November last year, rather late in the season, I noticed the Red Bishop was back - maybe he never left, it's rather difficult to differentiate him from the Sparrows and similarly brown-coloured birds when he's not wearing his breeding outfit. I also only know when his female is around when I see them together - she's similarly sparrow-like.

With spring breaking through here in South Africa now, the Black-headed Oriole is already enjoying the sweet nectar of the Aloes and I'm looking forward to hearing the Red Bishops bright chatter again!



6 comments:

  1. Love this birds graphic coloring! Nice page!

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  2. He's extremely colourful during the breeding season Kate, makes him stand out in the garden like a flash of light! Hope his predators don't think the same!

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  3. It's funny how exotic your flora and fauna seem to a midwesterner in the USA...as for this bird's mating color, I sometimes wonder just how this adaptation allows him to survive, let alone procreate. I suppose it's all more complicated than a few scientific principles can account for.

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  4. Hi Jeanette, I've seen how this unusual colouring can attract predators when I used to go outside with my Patagonian Conure - a Peregrine Falcon dive-bombed us in the hope of an easy tit-bit! But maybe the Red Bishop looks more like a flower in the garden than a tit-bit!

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