Well, actually it's not a bird race, it's a people-racing- after-birds race. Which is about as stupid as human beings get - and therefore is lots of fun. The birds are wild, and the winning team sees more bird species than other teams.
Actually I am not racing, I am going with my colleagues to snaffle a lot of birders and get them to fill in questionnaires for the project I am working on. Which will also be fun because I like talking to birders.
And the pix here are from my husband who wants to show off his gingers, photographed during the recent Titiwangsa Range Expedition. I didn't go because I was at the SFF convention in Oz, having fun while he was getting wet. I believe it rained. A lot.

6 comments:
Sounds completely loopy! Enjoy!
An activity for the birds! I can only watch wild ducks, swans, geese, Eurasian coots (no, I'm not calling anyone names) and Great Crested Grebes here in Switzerland.
I've a blog entry titled "Feathered friends flock together" (yeah, lame, I know).
Am a temporarily transplanted Malaysian. Hi, Glenda.
Would your husband have names for the gorgeous-amazing ginger flowers?
show off his gingers?? Hee. I'm a bad bad man with a tainted mind. But the flowers are beautiful.
Lol, Hrugaar! (At his age, one stops thinking about showing off, and starts covering up...)
Argus Lou - Enjoy your transplanting. We lived in Austria for 6 years and loved every minute. I remember the first time we drove to Switzerland - and stopped to ask directions in German from two men at the roadside. One replied in Schweitzerdeutsch, and I couldn't understand a word. I must have looked blank, because the second man then translated into standard German so I could comprehend!
The ginger names are down in the labels section of the post.
You mean your husband has reached 26 already?? :oD
Mea culpa - Hrugaar is a man!
Schweizer Deutsch is the funniest sounding language I've come across (advance apology to any Swiss tuning in, ya?) - I mean why did they change the pronunciation of so many Deutsch words? E.g. Liebe (love) is pronounced lee-ber in high German; why change it to 'lee-ay-bee'? It's beyond my ken. ;-)
*slaps forehead* Ah, the labels at the bottom! My hills are not alive with the sounds of Swiss-German.
Love the Latin names though the last one looks rather like an orchid.
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