Today I changed one of the lights in the garden. It was a job that was severely overdue and in a sudden fit of usefulness, I changed it. As I returned into the house, my father walked up to me and asked me if I had seen the bird. I gave him a blank look and explained that I had no idea what he was on about. He then explained to me that as I had walked out to change the light outside, a hadeda had wandered into my bathroom rather confidently. Apparently it had walked into the garage of our house, entered into the passage and had made its way into my bathroom.
My sister has a fear of birds (I don't get it at all but anyway) and she had been in my bedroom at the time, watching a DVD on my laptop. When my dad aparently told her about the hadeda, which was at that stage still in the bathroom, she had shreaked and locked herself in my room. Eventually my father managed to chase the thing out. I was rather upset that he hadn't managed to take a photo of the large ibis next to my loo so I could show you guys!
I guess this will have to do then. It's a photo that Helen took in Darling of some Hadeda's flying in a flock. And so you all know, hadeda's are very large birds. They are about 80cm long and weight about...well I don't know but I'm sure that it's a lot for a bird! Let's just say that if a house cat were to attack one from behind, the bird could easily take off and fly with the cat attached.
Random Fact For The Day:
Your stomach has to produce a new layer of mucus every two weeks, otherwise it will digest itself.
2 comments:
random fact from sarah
the glue at the back of israeli stamps is kosher
I thought that your sister's fear of birds was you fault? That's what she told me anyway...
Apparently a peck from a hadeda can crack a grown man's skull. That's another random fact. Probably entirely unproven. I know that since the moved into the suburban areas due to the drought about 12 years ago a lot of pets have gone missing, especially small dogs. I would be scared of one in the bathroom too.
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