Some lovely birdies today.

A friend asked me if the sunbirds prefer colored flowers, and yes, they do.
108.jpg

The first one is a female Southern Double-collared Sunbird (5 shots), and the second one is a Cape White-eye (5 shots).

But it is not only the sunbirds that like colored flowers, as some other bird species also prefer them. Let's have a look at what Wikipedia has to say about the subject.

We have some wooden trestle flowerpots in our front garden, and we deliberately planted the Cape Honeysuckle plants for the sunbirds. We have three different colored bushes and the thing about the tubular flowers of the bushes is that they hold much nectar for the birds. What we didn't know was that the sunbirds are also pollinators as explained by Wikipedia below.

Ornithophily or bird pollination is the pollination of flowering plants by birds. This sometimes (but not always) coevolutionary association is derived from insect pollination (entomophily) and is particularly well developed in some parts of the world, especially in the tropics, Southern Africa, and on some island chains. The association involves several distinctive plant adaptations forming a "pollination syndrome". The plants typically have colourful, often red, flowers with long tubular structures holding ample nectar and orientations of the stamen and stigma that ensure contact with the pollinator. Birds involved in ornithophily tend to be specialist nectarivores with brushy tongues and long bills, that are either capable of hovering flight or light enough to perch on the flower structures.

Source

She is a female Southern Double-collared Sunbird (Cinnyris chalybeus).
109.JPG

101.JPG

102.JPG

She had enough and simply took off, satisfied with her nectar drink.
110.JPG

And here below is the white-eye that also likes colored flowers.

The white-eyes are a family, Zosteropidae, of small passerine birds native to tropical, subtropical and temperate Sub-Saharan Africa, southern and eastern Asia, and Australasia. White-eyes inhabit most tropical islands in the Indian Ocean, the western Pacific Ocean, and the Gulf of Guinea. Discounting some widespread members of the genus Zosterops, most species are endemic to single islands or archipelagos. The silvereye, Zosterops lateralis, naturally colonised New Zealand, where it is known as the "wax-eye" or tauhou ("stranger"), from 1855. The silvereye has also been introduced to the Society Islands in French Polynesia, while the Japanese white-eye has been introduced to Hawaii.

Source

This is a Cape White-eye (Zosterops virens). They make cute little trilling sounds, and by instinct all the little birds never overeat, as they know that it will affect their flight speed. So, they believe in rather too little than too much to eat. It is their flying speed that often saves them from a predator bird attack, as they know how to dodge and dive.
014.JPG

015.JPG

018.JPG

This is a very special photo, as those flower tubes are very fragile, and if you touch them too hard by hand they simply come off. Look how this little one hangs on those flowers without damaging them. Amazing dexterity.
020.JPG

023.JPG

Sometimes when we strive after the "bigger" treasures in this world, we miss the "smaller" ones. In actual fact, the "smaller" ones are the real treasures that we can discover. It is not to do with the acquisition of an object/money/assets/success/titles, but rather an appreciation for the extraordinary in the ordinary things of each day. These include things like the song of the first bird in the morning, a raindrop on a leaf after a rainstorm, or little birds active on flowers, like these in the post.
Such is life.

I hope you enjoyed the pictures and the story.

Photos by Zac Smith. All-Rights-Reserved.

Camera: Canon PowershotSX70HS Bridge camera.

Until next time, cheers!



0
0
0.000
2 comments
avatar

The Mirror and the Stone

The Reflection That Cannot Be Denied

Take a look in the mirror.

Not the mirror of vanity, but the mirror of truth—the one that shows not the face you wear for the world, but the hands you used to shape it.

Every action you have taken, every vote you have cast, every voice you have silenced or lifted—these are not whispers in the wind. They are fingerprints pressed into wet clay, and the clay has hardened. You cannot unmake the impression. You cannot smooth the surface and pretend the hand was never there.

The Permanence of the Carved

When what you do is done on a blockchain, it is not written in ink. It is not stored in a drawer that can be locked, lost, or burned.

It is carved in stone.

Cryptographic stone. Immutable. Public. Eternal.

The blockchain does not care about your apologies. It does not soften with time. It does not accept revision. It holds the exact weight of every choice, preserved in the architecture of mathematics itself. Long after you have forgotten what you did, the ledger will remember. Long after you have told yourself a better story, the hash will tell the true one.

The Courage of Facing

So, look in the mirror.

See what is there. Not what you wish were there. Not what your allies tell you is there. But what the stone records.

You cannot take back what you have done. That door is closed. That block is sealed. That truth is permanent.

But you can still decide what you carve next.

For the stone remembers everything. The only question is whether you will finally read what it says.


#ImmutableLedger #TruthUnsilenced #BlockchainIntegrity #Bilpcoin
At Bilpcoin, we do not fight for attention. We fight for accountability.


"You are your wallet." Not a tool. Not a vessel. But your digital embodiment. Choose wisely what you carve into the stone.

0
0
0.000