The “Su-weet” Olive-backed Sunbird

“Su-weet!” Imagine a really high-pitched version of Ashton Kutcher’s term of endearment for Sean William Scott’s character in the wacky movie “Dude, Where’s My Car?” That’s the sound the olive-backed sunbird makes and the nickname we gave it long before we found out its actual name.

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It’s also known as the yellow-breasted (or yellow-bellied) sunbird (check out this link for more facts about it). We’ve often seen it at ground level on the road, dipping up and down a few meters ahead of our car before veering off to the surrounding vegetation.

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This one alighted on Riana’s balcony (the same morning I chanced upon a Painted Jezebel butterfly), unmindful of my presence.

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All pictures here are of a female. Unlike homo sapiens, the male of the species is the more stunning of the sexes, with its metallic blue-black forehead, throat and upper breast. It’s just too bad that whatever photos I managed to get of a he were at long-range not worth posting. Here’s to hoping I can capture close-ups of a male before the summer ends.

Posted in: Better Earth, Photo Gallery | Comments(0) | May 2009

Wintering in the Tropics: The Arctic Warbler

This birdwatching hobby has me hooked. It’s gotten me up earlier in the summer mornings, the better to catch sight of all the avian activity going on.

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I had a tough time identifying this specimen. Taking pictures of it also posed (pun intended, he he) a greater challenge, since it hops and flits about among the branches, rarely staying in one place for more than a couple of seconds.

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I’m not 100% sure but, from my research, this looks like an Arctic Warbler. Check out the Migration data contained in the above link; it appears that it winters (i.e., it spends the winter away from its usual habitat in a particular place) in southern Southeast Asian countries, including Thailand and the Philippines.

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If you’re lucky, you can spot the Arctic Warbler in the trees near the pre-school, amidst the more raucous mayas and the larger Yellow-Vented Bulbuls.

Posted in: Better Earth, Photo Gallery | Comments(0) | May 2009