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454 Forestry Road, Bluewater, Qld 4818
Phone: 0411 602 737 +61-411 602 737
Preferred Email: ian@birdway.com.au
Lee’s Addition:
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Lee’s Addition:
You would like me to take a note?
Looking down to start writing! [Notice the eyelashes]
Just because these are neat birds, decided to share these Secretarybird photos from Pinterest.
“Let not mercy and truth forsake you; Bind them around your neck, Write them on the tablet of your heart,” (Proverbs 3:3 NKJV)
“A faithful witness will not lie: but a false witness will utter lies.” (Proverbs 14:5 KJV)
Secretarybird (Sagittarius serpentarius) with open beak©WikiC
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Keep your tongue from evil, And your lips from speaking deceit. (Psalms 34:13 NKJV)
Secretarybird (Sagittarius serpentarius) with open beak©WikiC
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“The secretary birds had planned to have some field races,” began daddy, “and the afternoon of the races had come. You know, the secretary birds have very, very long thin legs. Their legs are so thin that you can hardly see how it is they can support such big bodies, for the secretary birds have really fat bodies.
“Well, on the afternoon of the races they all entered, and you never saw such running in all your life! They simply went like the wind, but the chief race of all was between one bird named Sandy and one named Mongo. They were considered the fastest runners of all. They had raced often and often before and had always come in a tie. But this time Mongo had been practising [p.29]very hard and had been very careful not to eat anything to hurt his wind. Sandy had been practising every day, too, but he thought it was absurd to give up things to eat. However, Mongo had always heard that all athletes were very careful of their eating, and, as he had never been able to beat Sandy yet, he was bound he would try everything he could so as to win.
“The prize was to be a fine, great, big snake which had been captured and killed a few days before the races were to take place.”
“Do secretary birds eat snakes?” asked Evelyn.
“Yes,” said daddy; “they practically live on them.”
“I shouldn’t think that would be nice food,” added Evelyn.
“No, we don’t think so,” answered daddy, “but you know we eat bacon and like it, so probably the secretary birds think it is as funny for us to eat pigs as we do to hear of their eating snakes.”
“No,” said Evelyn thoughtfully, “I suppose not. They sound so horrid, though.”
[p.30]At that moment Jack, who was growing very impatient, not caring what the secretary birds ate, chimed in: “Daddy, please hurry and tell us who won the race. I can hardly wait to hear. I am sure Mongo did, though.”
“No,” said Evelyn; “I think Sandy did because he wasn’t such an old fuss as Mongo.”
“Well,” continued daddy, “during the race all the secretary birds shrieked in their cackling voices: ‘Go it; go it! Win, Mongo! Win, Sandy!’
“For a few moments Mongo got quite a bit ahead, but Sandy succeeded in catching up with him, and they passed by the goal side by side.
“It was a splendid race, but it showed that Mongo and Sandy were really absolutely evenly matched, so they gave a funny cackle, which meant a laugh, and each, taking an end of the prize, said, ‘We’ll all have a taste of the prize, as neither of us can win it.’
“So they all sat down to a very jolly supper party.”
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Another Bird Tales
From
Daddy’s Bedtime Bird Stories – Gutenberg ebooks
By
Mary Graham Bonner
With four illustrations in color by
Florence Choate and Elizabeth Curtis
These stories first appeared in the American Press Association Service and the Western Newspaper Union.
Many of the sketches in this volume are the work of Rebecca McCann, creator of the “Cheerful Cherub,” etc.
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Daddy’s Bedtime Bird Stories by Mary Graham Bonner – 1917
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