Peering Into Their Souls | Bird Eyes | SMAP Contest Round 36

This is my first entry into a contest in this community. I love eyes, and I mainly sketch eyes. And last week I had the opportunity to take some close-up photographs of I think geese? Someone might be able to help me. These old ladies (I think they are ladies!) are on my walking route. I walk or jog past them almost every day. They are so friendly and walked up to the camera, even too close for me to take images! But I managed to snap some photographs just before they came too close. And then yesterday I saw the contest. So today I enter the contest with the following photograph. I think this one is the best of the bunch and her eye is so pretty. It almost felt like they stared into my soul. Or that I could stare into their souls. The eye is such a fascinating organ.

Entry to SMAP Round 36

_dsc9048.jpg

The Other Close-ups

Herewith are just some of the other images. These birds are really interesing. They walk so slow and they just seem friendly. They maybe just wanted a snack. I am not sure if people feed them. It is not a park where people get too often. It is on the side of a vineyard.

_dsc8965.jpg

_dsc9000.jpg

_dsc9049.jpg

_dsc9032.jpg

_dsc9025.jpg

_dsc9008.jpg

_dsc8981.jpg

_dsc8982.jpg

_dsc8986.jpg

_dsc8994.jpg

Full Body Portraits

Herewith are just some images of their whole bodies. Here you can see how clumsy and stout they look! They are the cutest.

_dsc9012.jpg

_dsc9016.jpg

_dsc9020.jpg

_dsc9024.jpg



0
0
0.000
15 comments
avatar

Welcome to the Feathered friends contest!
This must be Muscovy duck, if I am not mistaken.
Such an interesting eyes.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you so much! And, I knew someone would quickly identify them. I do not think they are endemic to South Africa so the books on local birds don't really feature them.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Lovely pics. Yes, that looks like a Muscovy duck :) One flew up to our 10 floor balcony and, would lay and egg a day and fly away--but not before covering her eggs with a silky net she created to protect them from predators.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you so much, my friend. Luckily they covered the egg! We have lots of predatory and scavengers here, so it is always good to see the populations grow or stay stable.

0
0
0.000
avatar

I agree and try to trust the delicate balance of things, not interfering too much in the natural order.

0
0
0.000
avatar

The sad part is that sometimes there will be suffering and death. Nature is brutal. If the eagle cannot eat the rabbit, the rabbit will eat all of the vegetation. Life is a very delicately balanced act like your rightly stated.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Yes, nature is red in tooth and claw, as the poet says. Soft-hearted moi is slowly but surely learning...

0
0
0.000
avatar

That is so true. We should always learn. Nature and life have so much it offers us to learn from.

0
0
0.000
avatar
Thank you for sharing this amazing post on HIVE!
  • Your content got selected by our fellow curator @stevenson7 & you just received a little thank you via an upvote from our non-profit curation initiative!

  • You will be featured in one of our recurring curation compilations and on our pinterest boards! Both are aiming to offer you a stage to widen your audience within and outside of the DIY scene of hive.

Join the official DIYHub community on HIVE and show us more of your amazing work and feel free to connect with us and other DIYers via our discord server: https://discord.gg/mY5uCfQ !

If you want to support our goal to motivate other DIY/art/music/homesteading/... creators just delegate to us and earn 100% of your curation rewards!

Stay creative & hive on!
0
0
0.000
avatar

Good day @fermentedphil, your pictures are so crystal clear, every detail is captured.
Nice going. Congratulations, well deserved.
Enjoy your day.

0
0
0.000
avatar

Thank you so much for your lovely comment. I really appreciate it. I was lucky that they were so friendly and tame. I could take nice close-ups. Thanks again @farm-mom.

0
0
0.000