Corellas are very much like a smaller version of a cockatoo & are just as noisy, especially when several dozen are feeding in a tree only 40 yards away, lol. Downloading is recommended.
P1000.
Yes, I know the nearest one is a little blown out--sorry 'bout that.
Nice shots, Earl. Are there problems with the various cockatoos doing damage?
They don't bother me personally, but I know quite a few country folk who have had their verandah railings 'wrecked' by them. They are a pest around grain silos & farmers do lose some of their crops to them, both before & after harvest, but this is acceptable (can't do much about it anyway, lol). Earl.
When I lived with a Triton, he was capable of destroying most anything. Fortunately he was a hand raised baby and he didn't remove fingers or toes. I kept shoes on just to be safe in case he got excited and forgot that he loved me.
When I lived with a Triton, he was capable of destroying most anything. Fortunately he was a hand raised baby and he didn't remove fingers or toes. I kept shoes on just to be safe in case he got excited and forgot that he loved me.
When I lived with a Triton, he was capable of destroying most anything. Fortunately he was a hand raised baby and he didn't remove fingers or toes. I kept shoes on just to be safe in case he got excited and forgot that he loved me.
Just Google it, Aud--there is a heap of info there. They are almost identical to our sulphur crested cockatoos--a large white bird with a distinctive sulphur crest. Earl.
Just Google it, Aud--there is a heap of info there. They are almost identical to our sulphur crested cockatoos--a large white bird with a distinctive sulphur crest. Earl.
Thanks Earl......shall do! Never heard of this birdy!!!
Have done so..............they are the same (almost) as our cockies!
Corellas are very much like a smaller version of a cockatoo & are just as noisy, especially when several dozen are feeding in a tree only 40 yards away, lol. Downloading is recommended.