




source::::bbc,com and The Telegraph UK …6 DEC 2013
NATARAJAN





source::::bbc,com and The Telegraph UK …6 DEC 2013
NATARAJAN

source:::: glasbergen.com
natarajan
Some people look outside their window and see a beautiful tree. Then there are some who can see a beautiful view of the surrounding area. Then there are some, like those on the internation space station, that can look outside their windows and see the entire world. One might say that is the ultimate of views.
A beautiful video of the view one sees from outside this particular window…
pl click the link above for the video and watch the world as seen from ISS WINDOW !!!!
NATARAJAN
source::::: youtube
natarajan

Sunset over Sydney Harbour. Photo: Hirsty Photography

Lie back, relax! Photo: Glenn Addicott

Busy on Wilson Island, the Great Barrier Reef: ‘Check out’ and ‘Check in’ time! Photo: Tourism Australia

Swimming with the sea lion pups in Baird Bay, SA. Photo: Rod Keogh

From where you’d rather be! Port Douglas. Photo: Tourism Australia

Cute alert! Koalas captured at Sydney’s Taronga Zoo. Photo: Taronga Zoo keeper Tony Britt-Lewis

Stunning day for snorkelling in Coral Bay, WA. Photo: Nathan Wills Photography

Massive swell in the Margaret River Wine Region. Photo: Russell Ord

Showing up in the same outfit. Who wore it better? Photo: Jen Rayner
source:::::news.com.au
natarajan
source:::: Youtube
natarajan
Spectacular footage of Australia’s north west desert region has been captured, inadvertently, by a sea eagle that ‘stole’ a video camera and took it for a 70-mile flight.
The lens recorded the bird’s flapping wings – in sound and vision – the crevasses it flew through, the desert it crossed and finally the amusing moments when it landed and began pecking at the device.
The motion-sensor camera had been set up by Aboriginal rangers in a gorge near the Margaret River last May in the hope of capturing images of fresh-water crocodiles.
The camera had been set up to record fresh-water crocodiles but instead recorded the crevasses along the route taken by the bird

But within weeks the camera had disappeared. No-one, they agreed, would dare to steal it from croc territory, so they believed it had somehow fallen into the water.
Then, just a few weeks ago, ranger Roneil Skeen and his colleagues received a message from a Parks and Wildlife ranger saying a small device had been found near another river more than 70 miles away.
The video camera revealed the identity of the thief and just where the scoundrel had taken it.
Rangers were able to extract three 30-second clips that showed the juvenile sea eagle scooping up the camera and taking to the air with it, capturing amazing scenes of the Australian outback.

When the camera was eventually deposited on firm ground, the eagle can be seen approaching the lens and pecking at it.
‘There are 14 of us rangers and we’ve been pretty amazed at what we’ve seen on the camera,’ said Mr Skeen, a member of the Gooniyandi Aboriginal tribe.
‘We’ve had camera traps moved by animals before, but none of them have taken off – a sort of flying camera. It was quite incredible to see it’.
Mr Skeen told the ABC: ‘We knew this was a juvenile eagle because the adult sea eagles, once they get their food or their prey, they usually take it right up into the sky and drop it
But this one was still learning because he just took it near the cliff-side and he never dropped it. He just put it down and started pecking at it.
‘An adult one would have flown it right up the top and yeah, for sure, it would have smashed that camera.’ It won’t happen again, said Mr Skeen.
He and his colleagues have resolved to bolt their camera down next time.
source:::: RICHARD SHEARS in mailonline.com UK
natarajan
source :::mailonline.com UK
natarajan
With distinctive white rings encircling its eyes, the silvereye looks just like one of the feathered stars of hit video game Angry Birds.
There’s no computer wizardry at work here, though. The silvereye is a real-life eye-opener.
Also known as wax-eye, or white-eye, the diminutive birds can be found in New Zealand, as well as Australia and some of the southwest Pacific Islands, including Fiji.
Eye eye: The bird that looks distinctly cartoon-like
Distinctive: The silvereye has a conspicuous white ring around the eye

Silvereyes stay in pairs all year but in the winter they form big flocks, often flying at night in search of food.
As the breeding season approaches the pairs break away to form individual territories and the first year birds pair up. Prolific breeders, they raise two to three broods per season, with between two to five eggs per brood.
Both adults incubate for about 11 days and the chicks fledge at about 10 days. The young are independent at three weeks and will breed at about nine months old.
Here’s looking at you: The silvereye’s eyes are so bright they almost look painted on
They have recorded that these little birds can live up to 12 years.
The Silvereye was first recorded in New Zealand in 1832, but arrived in greater numbers in 1856.
source:::: TED THORNHILL in mailonline.com.uk
natarajan
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2516875/Thought-Angry-Birds-This-bright-eyed-species-looks-like-flown-straight-famous-video-game.html#ixzz2mO3vnq3l