July 13, 2013

MORE BIRDS AT GOA VELHA



GOA DIARIES: BIRDING AT GOA VELHA - PART 2


April is that time of the year when most species of birds in Goa breed. Since my visit coincided with the breeding season, I did get a few snaps of the avians as they were occupied in various activities relating to passing on their genes. Bhabi's mom spotted an Oriental Magpie Robin (Copsychus saularis) from the kitchen. I followed this beautiful bird as she went to the road, collecting small twigs and deposited them into a tree hollow right at the entrance of the home. After reading about them on Wikipedia, I concluded that it was a female and she would lay her eggs within a week. Besides, I also saw a pair of Jungle Mynahs (Acridotheres fuscus) catching insects and feeding it to their young who were holed up, quite literally in a coconut tree. In every 15 minutes, one of the two parents would fly back to the nest with some food - usually an insect in their beak for the chicks to eat. Unlike the Robins, both the male and the female Jungle Mynah chip in while raising the young ones.


Oriental Magpie Robin



Jungle Mynah

Aaar - Paar: A hole in the coconut tree




For more on the Goa trip:
(1) Life is a Beach (Link)
(2) Birds at Goa Velha (Link)

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