Ducks At A Distance

Fur Real Friends Collectible Yellow Duckling

  • Bring home this lovable, cuddly baby duckling that really comes to ¿life¿ as it responds to your like and attention
  • Just like a real duckling, this electronic toy bird flaps its wings, raises its head, opens its beak, and makes ¿real¿ duckling sounds
  • Keep interacting with your duckling, and it becomes more playful
  • Be sure to ¿feed¿ your duckling with its bottle
  • Duckling figure comes with a bottle and a special adoption certificate

Product Description
Bring home this lovable, cuddly baby duckling that really comes to ¿life¿ as it responds to your like and attention. Just like a real duckling, this electronic toy bird flaps its wings, raises its head, opens its beak, and makes ¿real¿ duckling sounds. Keep interacting with your duckling, and it becomes more playful. Be sure to ¿feed¿ your duckling with its bottle. Take care of your baby duckling and you¿re sure to be the best of friends! Duckling figure come… More >>

Fur Real Friends Collectible Yellow Duckling

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Observations on sexing and aging ducks using wings

Observations on sexing and aging ducks using wings

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Waterfowl Junkie The Bird Hitch Original Bird Breaster

Product Description
The WaterFowl Junkie Bird Hitch is constructed absolutely from Stainless steel. It foliage wings or wings and head attached to breast for officially authorized transportation and works with any 2 inch receiver hitch. Makes the perfect gift for the hunter who has everything.The Bird Hitch is calculated for hunters that take out of town trips for several days where you are required to leave a wing on for officially authorized transportation. With The Bird Hitch you can also leave the head on if that is… More >>

Waterfowl Junkie The Bird Hitch Original Bird Breaster

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Duck On A Boat…Will you read and sea, please?

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Duck On A Boat

Of all the places
I’d like to be
many than other, here at sea

In a pond
or on a lake
perhaps snuggled, with a handsome drake

Flying with friends
eating in fields
having rice and grain, for all my meals

Preening my feathers
fluffing my wings
these are a few, of my favorite things

But alas I am stuck
on steel now I float
such is the life, of a duck on a boat

Yes…I am a duck…on a boat…at sea
.
.

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Information on Hummingbirds

Hummingbirds are a joy for a birdwatcher to observe. They are found only in the Western Hemisphere, from as far north as Southeastern Alaska and the Maritimes of Canada and as far south as Southern Chile. There are approximately 350 species of hummingbirds with 320 species found in the tropics. Within the family of hummingbirds is found the smallest bird in the world, the Bee Hummingbird of Cuba at 2.17 inches (5.5 cm) and weight 1.95gm (0.07 oz). Hummingbirds range in size from 2 inches to 8 inches.

The hummingbird derives its name from the humming sound that is produced by its swift wingbeat. Commonly the wingbeat is so swift that the individual only sees a blur as most of these birds flap their wings about 50 times per second. The alacrity of the wingbeat depends on the size of the bird, the largest the Giant Hummingbird, has a wingbeat rate of 10-15 times per second. The fastest recorded rate was about 80 times per second, on a tiny Amethyst Woodstar, and the slightly smaller Bee Hummingbird – the world’s smallest bird – may have an even quicker rate. A hummingbird’s wing is flexible at the shoulder, but inflexible at the wrist, this enables them to glide in many different directions. They can glide right, left, up, down, backwards and even upside down. To go away from the flowers on which they feed hummingbirds glide backwards and are the only bird able to glide backwards. While other birds get their flight power from the downstroke only, hummingbirds also have strength on the up-stroke. Though they glide very quick, they can suddenly stop and make a soft landing. They are so set alight they do not build up much momentum. Hummingbirds have poorly developed feet, so that although they are able to perch and will do so when feeding or resting, they do not walk. In order to go, even along a branch, they glide. Hummingbirds lift from perches without pushing off; they rise entirely on their own power, flapping their wings at almost full alacrity before lifting off. Hummingbirds sleep perched on branches with their neck retracted and their head forward, the bill pointed up at a astute angle, and the feathers fluffed.

It is believed that hummingbirds live for only 3 to 4 years. They have a quick heartbeat with a rate of 1260 beats per minute having been measured in a Blue-throated Hummingbird. In torpid hummingbirds, the heart rate can drop to 50-180 per minute. Their quick heart rate and swift wing motion require them to feed regularly throughout the day. It is reported that they must feed every 10 minutes and they may consume 2/3 of their body weight in a single day. A major part of a hummingbird’s diet is the nectar they obtain from flowers and their bills are perfectly adapted to the various types of flowers that they feed on. Some hummingbirds have especially curved or elongated bills that allow them to feed on special flowers, eg the White-tipped Sicklebill hummingbird whose downward curving bill allows it to draw nectar from heliconias. The Ruby-Topaz Hummingbird has a small and slightly decurved bill that is suited to feeding on the flowers of the ixora shrub. The Blue-tailed Emerald has a small bill that is suited for feeding on the Hibiscus flower. the Copper-rumped Hummingbird has a straight long bill that allows it to feed on medium sized tube shaped flowers such as the Allamanda. In feeding, hummingbirds use their tongue to lap the nectar in a similar manner to cats lapping milk. Their tongue can extend a distance equal to their beak length. As they feed hummingbirds accidentally collect pollen and as they go from flower to flower, they help the flowers to reproduce.

Hummingbirds have little or no sense of smell, so colour is vital to a hummingbird’s search process for locating flowers containing nectar. While they will stay any flower that has sufficient nectar they prefer flowers that are red to orange in colour. It is believed that there are several reasons for this colour preference. Red flowers standout in a green background and so are more easily seen by the hummingbird. It is also believed that because hummingbirds compete with insects for nectar they choose flowers that are less likely to be visited by insects. Most insects do not see well at the red end of the colour spectrum and so may not stay red flowers while hummingbirds see the full visible spectrum.

Hummingbirds also need protein in order to build muscles, so they eat insects. They prefer to feed on small spiders and slow-flying insects such as gnats, small wasps and leafhoppers, which are rather buoyant in air and easy to catch. They also probe the bark and foliage for insects such as aphids, spiders, caterpillars and insect eggs. It is believed that up to one-half of their diet is made up of small insects. Hummingbirds are capable of income for total periods without nectar as a component of their diet. They can promptly convert stout reserves and recently ingested insects to energy when deprived of nectar. Hummingbirds compete for nectar and insects and so they develop territories, which they guard aggressively. They will fight with other hummingbirds that enter their territory but serious harm is seldom inflicted during these fights. Also when food sources are scarce they fight to protect their fund.

Most hummingbirds are green except hermits, which are mainly auburn, and are known for the iridescence. These brilliant, iridescent colors of the hummingbird plumage are caused by the refraction of incident set alight by the structures of certain feathers. These structures split set alight into its component colors, and only certain frequencies are refracted back to the viewer. The auburn colour in some hummingbirds is the result but of pigmentation. Hummingbirds groom themselves with their bills and claws, using oil from a gland near their tail. They also use their claws like a comb to groom their heads and necks. They sunbathe positioning their breast towards the sun and fluffing out, extending their neck and diffusion their tail. Hummingbirds also take water baths using the water in shallow pools or cupped foliage. They flicker their wings or pull them straight back while lifting and diffusion their tail; they dip their chins and bellies into the water. At times they can be seen sitting on a bare branch allowing the rain to soak through to their skin. After bathing they will preen and dry their feathers.

Hummingbirds build cup shaped nests, but hermits build long hanging nests usually attached to foliage. Male hummingbirds do not contribute to the construction of nests or the care of childish. All feeding is therefore left to the female. When feeding the female perches on the side of the nest, arches her back, stretches her neck, lifts her head, and holds her bill down to regurgitate nectar and half-digested insects to her babies. Her throat swells and she pumps her beak like a sewing needle.

Although various larger birds, snakes, and mammals raid hummingbird nests for eggs and chicks, this is not a major cause of death.

Learn about sheep facts and elephant facts at the About Animals site.

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Niedermayers to the rescue; Brothers put OT shot in net and Ducks, Wings tied 1-1.: An article from: Winnipeg Free Press

Product Description
This digital document is an article from Winnipeg Free Press, published by Thomson Gale on May 14, 2007. The length of the article is 586 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after buy. You can view it with any web browser.

Citation Details
Title: Niedermayers to the rescue; Brother… More >>

Niedermayers to the rescue; Brothers put OT shot in net and Ducks, Wings tied 1-1.: An article from: Winnipeg Free Press

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Learn About the Falcon Bird

Falcon birds are one of the 60 species of birds of prey that comprise of the family known as the Falconidae in the sequence of Falconiformes, which also has the eagles, hawks, kites and vultures included in the family. The real falcons are epitomized by a bullet-shaped body, which is normally long with pointed wings and a medium to sometimes long tail, with astute long toes, hooked shaped claws, a small neck and a small hooked, normally jagged bill.

These birds vary in size from 15 to 63 cm (6 to 25 inches) in length and weigh up to 1.8 kg (4 lbs). Their colours may clash widely among the species; but both the sexes of any species normally look alike in appearance, except for the fact that the female falcon birds are larger in size.

Some of their species are also known as leisure activities, kestrels, falconets, or the merlin (pigeon hawk); and nine or ten out of their species in four various groups are called the caracaras. In falconry, only the female peregrine (hawk/duck), Falco peregrinus, is appropriately called the falcon; in authoritarian falconry usage of the term, it might as well be applied to other birds on in an amalgamation with additional descriptive words. Similarly, the male peregrine is called a tiercel, but the can only be applied to various other male falcons with proper qualifying terms.

Falcon birds are very sturdy and swift fliers with immense aerial alertness. They hardly ever glide in a way of hawks. The peregrine has been timed at 290 km/h (180 mph). This rate of alacrity and alertness make falcon bird’s unbeaten hunters of birds, reptiles, and many smaller mammals. Many of the species, conversely, are very insectivorous or eaters of carrion. But falcons wallop and seize their prey with their immensely astute claws, and they normally kill their captured prey with their beaks. 

These birds are usually private or they live in pairs. They make their nests on trees or on cliffs. They often invade the nests of other birds. The female falcon bird commonly lays two to six eggs, and both the male and the female falcons incubate their eggs and take care of their childish. The falcon goes through four various yet unique periods in its life cycle. The duration of each period varies among the species and also with the size of the birds. The nestling period take the time from hatching to the first flight of the childish one. During this time the childish bird grows swiftly and grows all of its feathers. The post-nestling phase is of course the fledging. Through this time the parents of the childish hunt food for their little ones. It is considered a juvenile when the bird foliage its nest to be on its own. The juvenile period lasts until the bird has reached its sexual maturity, which is when it is said to be an adult. Most falcons rarely ever live for more than 20 years.

The falcon birds’ one real adversary and enemy is mankind. For many years the falcons were considered to be as vermin for they were thought to be a gray toll on the livestock. But, now pesticides have been the main reason for devastating and jeopardizing several species. The first fossil confirmation of the falcon family is from the Miocene Epoch of Argentina, which was present nearly 15 million years ago. Today, there are eleven known fossil species.

To read about tiger facts and cat facts, stay the Animals Facts site.

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Detroit Red Wings Tickets

Detroit Red Wings is also among the six vital teams of NHL and was founded in 1926 fall. A Detroit based organization bought it for a total of $100,000 with Victoria Cougars of Western Hockey League (WHL). Initial name of the team was Detroit Cougars and they played their first season on the other side of the river in Windsor, Ontario. Cougars were very successful when they were in Western Hockey League (WHL) but the new NHL team tried hard for first two seasons and were out of the contest. Jack Adams was signed in 1927 when they shifted to the new Olympia arena in Detroit. He was hired as a general administrator that would be their GM for thirty five years. Team’s name was changed to Falcons in 1930. An industrialist Jim Norris bought the team in 1932 and team’s name was changed again for the third time in six years.
Detroit played against Chicago Blackhawk’s in 1933-34 season and lost in their first Stanly Cup finals. They were back in the chase for Lord Stanley’s attack after few years. They won their very first NHL championship by before a live audience against Toronto Maple Leafs in 1936. Fans in “Hockey town” were excited as another Red Wings and New York Rangers contest was in play in small period of time in 1937 finals.
Detroit Wings were on the edge of making a foremost run in early 1950s. NHL’s resolution player at that time was Gordie Howe among Ted Lindsay, Sid Abel, Red Kelley, and Terry Sawchuk in goal. In 1950 a run between Detroit and New York Rangers was very tough that went to game seven, overtime and was won by Detroit. They carried on with this win and won against Montreal Canadians in 1952, 1954, and 1955 in Stanley Cup finals. Red wings kept performing good game for the rest of ten years, but poor deals like Terry Sawchuk to the Bruins resulted them out of the contest in late 1950s. Next ten years were again very bright for Detroit Red wings as they were back in peak form and made to the Stanley Cup finals for the fourth time in 1961-66 time period.
 The Red Wings continued with their best trace in regular season for third time. They won the Stanley Cup second time in a row by defeating Washington Capitals in the finals. Red Wings kept winning as Steve Yzerman achieved the Conn Smythe trophy as the contest MVP. In 2002 Scotty Bowman’s team had their third cup under his leadership. Scotty Bowman and goaltender Dominick Hasek thought it was the best time to proclaim their retirements. Dave Lewis took the responsibility with Joseph as a warden and they remained an impressive team in Hockey town.
Anaheim Mighty Ducks surprised the Wings in the first round of the contest. Ducks defeated Wings in four games and credit went to the goaltending on Jean Sebastian Giguere. Dominik Hasek came back in 2003 season after one year retirement.
 For more information you can stay: <a onClick=”javascript:pageTracker._trackPageview(‘/outgoing/article_exit_link’);” href=”http://www.sportsticketsguide.com/sports/Detroit-Red-Wings.php“> Detroit Red Wings Tickets </a>

 

Maria is the lover of sports and all sports games. She likes to write about sports. She works for SportsTicketsGuide and OnlineTicketSpot (http://www.onlineticketspot.com).

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