Budgerigars - Earthflight
2012 ж. 29 Қаң.
15 182 253 Рет қаралды
Millions of budgerigars being chased by a black falcon and still finding time for a quick drink!
Millions of budgerigars being chased by a black falcon and still finding time for a quick drink!
Only the ignorant owners keep a budgie in a small cage, never take it out, and basically ignore it, and still think it is 'happy'. There are lots of good budgie owners... unfortunately though, the majority of owners are those who are EXTREMELY uneducated and think that exotic birds are 'domesticated' like dogs and cats. They are NOT domesticated, and thus, very difficult to properly care for. Something that pet stores don't like to tell their customers... money, money, money.
Whatever these budgies are communicating is making my budgies squawk like crazy.
Honey, I think all of our grass is flying away
What a mesmerizing sight. The flock almost seem to shimmer with iridescence
When I saw the hawk I was thinking "this must be like opening the fridge for him" and then those budgies started to feint.
"Drinks like a budgie" - even when you're life's in danger, ya gotta have a drink!
The noise level must be deafening.
Every pet budgie: "Gotta climb... so far..."
I want all of them in my backyard.
I've never seen so many budgies at one time. . . . Very interesting.....TY
"Guys?? I'm being chased, little help here?? Guys? GUYS? Oh screw you."
Falcon: "You little sh*ts think this is a mother f*cking game?"
I've seen huge flocks of budgies in the wild like this on my uncle's Queensland cattle station. Wonderful sight.
millions of budgies, couldn't even catch one
My budgie is sitting next to me screaming at her water
Budgies are truly acrobatic fliers. I love my budgies💗
Africans: "We have locust swarms here that eat our crops, let's move to Australia so we dont have to worry anymore"
I like how the falcon's mate greets it when it comes home empty handed.
I can imagine the falcon telling his partner: "Holy shit bro, I'm out, gonna hunt turtles from now on".
I've seen a flock of corella parrots in Western Australia, fly directly up towards a circling sea eagle looking for ducks in the local bushland park lake. They circled the eagle tighter and tighter restricting it's wing flap area and forward movement area so that it lost height, dropped below the flock and shot off back towards the beach. Also as they circled, the corelleas squawked at a deafening pitch. I sometimes see the ducks sitting high up in the more horizontal fat gum tree branches, resting on their flat webbed feet amongst their corella parrot friends.