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Bird TV: for your pet birds, cats and humans

By Birds & Things, February 8, 2016

For your pet’s first viewing, please watch together to make sure that nothing in the video causes your companion distress. Time codes are below. I would love to know who is watching this (furred, feathered, or bald). Also, check out my B&T merchandise: http://birds-n-things.redbubble.com. Please subscribe for my weekly video uploads.

(ad breaks 20:20, 40:05)
1:51 – Juvenile Rainbow Lorikeet’s first bath
2:53 – Corellas frolicking in the grass
5:05 – Noisy Miners (one jumps on another one, twice! 5:36 5:40)
6:11 – See Noisy Miners turn into cute balls of fluff
7:42 – Pinga, our twice-rescued pigeon/dove with a dominatrix tendency (will be a separate video)
12:16 – Magpie family
13:01 – Juvenile Lorikeets being dopey and cute
16:10 – Juvenile Magpie destroys my sunflowers, one seedling at a time
19:43 – a very wet pigeon
19:56 – sleepy pigeon
24:23 – noisy Cockatoo
22:55 – Sulphur-Crested Cockatoo family
29:19 – Juvenile Butcherbird inexperienced with bath
32:51 – frisky Rainbow Lorikeet (the first of many)
33:36 – Crested Pigeon
37:58 – Rainbow Lorikeet puts the move on a Noisy Miner
40:05 – Masked Lapwings
41:18 – what a pigeon does when it rains
44:06 – Corellas playing in the trees (Crouching Tiger bamboo forest scene)
46:20 – Pinga white dove’s new mate
49:10 – Noisy Miners tongues wagging and beak clicking
52:40 – Corellas play with a fallen tree branch
55:41 – Long-billed Corellas and Sulpher-Crested Cockatoos visit together
55:51 – Imposter Cockatoo with goggles on
58:14 – Juvenile Magpie playing with cat toys (in his favorite flower pot)

* Parrots are highly social and intelligent creatures, and need lots of love, space, and enrichment. They are also heavily trafficked from the wild. Please reconsider before running out to buy a parrot as a pet.* Cheers! 😊

Source: Birds & Things

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