English, asked by TbiaSamishta, 1 year ago

justify the relevance of the feathered friend?

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Answered by Sonalibendre
0
HOLA MATE HERE IS UR ANSWER ♥♥♥♥♥♥

Our balcony is beside a park. In the park, there are varieties of birds. I have developed a hobby of bird-watching and studying about them. Very often, I have seen parrots, woodpeckers, warblers, finches and magpie robins. Common birds such as sparrows, Indian Mynahs and the irritating crows also stay next to them.

But the exotic birds do not build nests here. Only the common birds do. The woodpecker comes here and drums away on the trunk of the neem tree. The flinches come here and sing some songs and then disappear. I once saw a fight between an Indian Mynah and a crow. At the end of the fight, the Mynah struck the crow with its beak and flew away. These birds surprise us with such glimpses from the daily drama that unfold in their lives in the park.

On a recent sunny Sunday morning, I was as usual parked at my favourite corner of the balcony to watch my bird friends. I was surprise to see a new bird sitting on the branch of the Radhachura tree. Its head was black and its body yellow. I ran inside to fetch my binoculars to see the bird clearly. It had bright red eyes. I saw it heading towards a bushy thing which was made of grass hanging from the tree. There were two of them and they had built a nest! I was thrilled. I took my camera to take pictures of the birds.

But the problem was to figure out what species they were. I asked my father, and showed him the birds. He was excited to see them but he could not give me the answer. “Maybe they are migratory birds,” he suggested. Then we thought of searching the internet. We found that the bird is a black-hooded oriole.

The next day we showed the birds to my grandfather and asked him whether these birds had indeed come from a foreign land. He laughed out loud and said that these birds were called Benebou in Bengali and that they are found throughout India. I was delighted to know that the beautiful birds are Indian and our park is now their home. Now we are enthusiastically waiting to see the Benebou babies once their eggs hatch.

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