little boy feeding a monkey
At Fayoum Zoo, A kid try to feed monkeys. he put a piece of banana on long iron bole to reach monkeys.
94
views
Bunny Born With No Ears
We used to see Rabbits with big ears but it's the first time to find bunny without ears, Milo the rabbit was born deaf, we love to see him play around us.
223
views
Hungry Hippo in the Zoo
Hungry Hippo asking for food by opening its mouth for visitors.
115
views
3
comments
Group of hungry Great Pink Pelican fighting for food
Group of hungry Great Pink Pelican fighting to catch fish when visitor feed them.
8
views
2
comments
cute girl try to feed Giraffe
girl try to feed giraffe in Giza Zoo, she success after several attempts,
83
views
1
comment
Amazing Peacock in Giza Zoo
We found this Peacock in Giza Zoo,
it's beautiful colors made us surprised.
80
views
1
comment
Cute pet birds singing their hearts out
This is a unique footage of my pet budgies singing.
28
views
Group of hungry Great Pink Pelican waiting for food
In Giza Zoo we found Group of Great Pink Pelican waiting for food then the guard came to feed them fishes.
23
views
2
comments
Smart Parrot drinks Apple juice
funny and smart parrot drinks apple juice in a cup at Sharm El Sheikh, Soho Square
16/12/2019
28
views
Sun raise
in Sharm El Shiekh, Egypt .
It was 17/12/2019 at 06:28AM from Pyramisa Hotel I felt so comfortable when I saw this view
6
views
2
comments
Baby Scimitar-horned Oryx want to breastfeed from her mother
Baby Scimitar-horned Oryx try to breastfeed from her mother in Fayoum zoo but the mother is upset because the children making huge noise make her feel angry.
14
views
1
comment
kid watching fighting Fallow Deers
Cute kid went to the Zoo to see animals, He saw 2 Fallow Deers plays together by hitting their horns together, he thought that they were fighting.
11
views
1
comment
A child is afraid of Great Pink Pelican
This boy feed Great Pink Pelicans , he gets some fishes to feed them, But after throwing first fish to them he found them walk out water and moved to him to take another fish. He thought that they want to eat him, so he was scared and runaway.
7
views
1
comment
Boy feeding Great Pink Pelican
Boy (2 years and 8 months) loves to feed animals and birds, he took fishes and went to the Zoo to feed Great Pink Pelican
Fabulous Indian Peafowl
Peacocks and peahens, these are the birds known as peafowl, members of the pheasant family. Although most people call the species peacocks, the word really only refers to the male bird. Just like among chickens, where the male is called a rooster or cock and the female is called a hen, male peafowl are peacocks, female peafowl are peahens, and babies are peachicks! There are two peafowl species: Indian or blue peafowl and green peafowl. Most people are familiar with the Indian peafowl, since that is the kind found in many zoos and parks.
The peacock has some of the brightest feathers and one of the most impressive courting displays of any bird in the world. The Indian peacock has very flashy plumage, with a bright blue head and neck, but the Indian peahen is a drab, mottled brown in comparison. The male needs his bright feathers to attract a mate, and the female needs to be able to blend in with the bushes so that predators cannot see her while she is incubating her eggs.
Unlike the Indian peafowl, the male and female green peafowl have similar coloration, although the peahen's colors are not as vibrant as the peacock's, and the male has a much longer tail. Green peafowl have green, rather than blue, feathers on the head and neck. Both Indian and green peafowl have bare patches of skin around their eyes and a funny crest on the top of their head made of feathers arranged in a fan shape. The Indian peafowl’s crest looks like little dots on the end of sticks!
The peacock’s back and belly have iridescent feathers in a scale pattern. But the thing that the Indian and green peacocks are best known for is—not the tail! These peacocks have a long “train,” which most people think is their tail. Actually, those long feathers are the male's tail coverts, or the feathers that cover the base of the tail. The train is covered in ocelli, which are round spots that look a lot like shining eyes.
It may seem that having such a long train and bright feathers would slow a peacock down and make him an easy target for predators like mongooses, jungle cats, stray dogs, leopards, and tigers—and this is absolutely true! However, if a predator grabs the train, the long feathers pull out easily, and the peacock can fly away.
When a peacock is in his second year, he grows his first train, but it has no ocelli and is not as long as a full-grown male’s. The train gets longer and more elaborate every year after that. At about five or six years of age, it reaches its maximum splendor. The peacocks that are the toughest—those that are able to survive long enough to have a really impressive train—are the ones that have the most mates and offspring. The coveted blue-eyed feathers of the train are dropped once a year; new feathers immediately begin growing and are completed a few months later.
Peahens seem to prefer males with the longest trains and biggest displays. In fact, the peacock’s female-attraction power is directly related to the perfection of his spectacular train, including its overall length, the number of iridescent “eyes” that are present, and even the symmetry of their patterning. It was the peacock’s train that apparently set Charles Darwin to thinking about the workings of how a special kind of natural selection he called “sexual selection” might operate and how a sense of esthetic beauty might have evolved, among birds AND humans.
A legend says that the peacock’s Creator gave it a horrible voice, lest its beauty make the bird overly conceited. Peafowl have 11 different calls, but the peacocks are the ones that really yell. They have a call that carries for a long distance and sounds like “may-AWE, may-AWE.” Some say the call sounds like a human crying for help! Peacocks call in the early morning and late evening, and practically all day during the breeding season.
In the past, wealthy people brought peafowl to their estates to strut about the grounds and look pretty. Then the peafowl reproduced and spread out into the surrounding areas. This caused problems in some places, because the peacocks made so much noise in the early morning that they became a real nuisance! Other animals don’t mind, though. With their sharp eyes, peafowl are likely to be the first to see a predator and call out a loud alarm.
184
views
1
comment
Barbary Sheep Taking Sand Bath
It's a upnormal moment when I saw these Barbary Sheep taking Sand Bath in the Zoo. I think they did this because of the hot weather so they try to decrease the body's heat with the water on the ground.
They are most active at dawn and dusk and try to stay in the shade and shelter during the heat of the day.
The Barbary sheep looks like a mix between a sheep and a goat. It is stocky, with short legs and a long face. This sheep is about 80 to 100cm tall at the shoulder and they weigh between 40 to 140kg. Their horns can reach up to 50cm in length. Its coat is a sandy-brown colour but darkens as the animal ages. It is woolly during the winter but moults to a finer, sleek coat for the hot summer months.
Both males and females have horns that sweep backwards and outwards in an arch, although those of the male are much thicker, longer and heavily ridged.
One of the most distinguishable features about the Barbary sheep is the long, vertical fringe of hair that goes from the throat down to the upper part of the front legs. On the males, this is longer and almost touches the ground.
6
views
1
comment
greatness of motherhood in animals
female monkey carrying her son while searching for food.
It is great when you see the greatness of motherhood in animals, she did not leave her son on the ground but always carry it even in the time of hunger and searching for food.
20
views
4
comments
Group of The European roe deer need food!
Group of The European roe deer waiting the Zoo keeper to give them food, they walking together searching for him because they are very hungry.
The fallow deer (Dama dama) is a ruminant mammal belonging to the family Cervidae. This common species is native to Europe, but has been introduced to Antigua & Barbuda, Argentina, South Africa, Fernando Pó, São Tomé, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mayotte, Réunion, Seychelles, Comoro Islands, Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, Cyprus, Israel, Cape Verde, Lebanon, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States, the Falkland Islands, and Peru.
Some taxonomers include the rarer Persian fallow deer as a subspecies (D. d. mesopotamica),
while others treat it as an entirely different species (D. mesopotamica).
18
views
1
comment