Many of our followers have seen this photo before. Now it will have a much larger audience in India. A group focused on endangered species at Encyclopædia Britannica South Asia has asked to use the photo on the cover of a textbook. Of course I said YES!
The Andean Condor has one of the largest wingspans of all birds.
Today was a highlight in our Peruvian trip. After visiting a couple of cities we are in Colca Canyon, deeper than the Grand Canyon, and we get to witness the spectacle of the magnificent Andean Condor. Thankfully there are conservationists and environmentalists who believed these great birds should be saved regardless of the cost. The result is being able to watch these great birds in their natural environment instead of a zoo.
I will be posting more of this trip whenever internet connections and time allows. But for now here are three pictures of this magnificent bird.
The Andean Condor has one of the largest wingspans of all birds.
The Andean Condor looks to the only creature on this planet that can save them – us.
Smoking volcanos tower on the horizon as you stand on the vast salar. Shallow pools of water teem with brine shrimp. Flamingos flock to these lagoons to feast on them. As you watch you quickly become parched courtesy of the thin, dry and windy air.
You are standing on the vast salt flats (salar in Spanish) of Salar de Atacama, the largest salar in Chile. In this desolation life carves out a precarious niche that is being threatened by global warming. As the earth heats, the rivers send less water to the vast salt flats where rain doesn’t fall and evaporation takes its toll.
As the habitat shrinks, so does the population of these large and beautiful birds. Nearby mines disturb and pollute the environment with chemicals that are highly toxic to flamingos. As roads are improved tourism and poachers take an additional toll.
Conservationists are trying to protect these birds. The Andean Flamingo was declared an endangered species in 2010. Many of the places flamingos reside in the summer and winter have been made national parks. However many of their breeding grounds remain unprotected.
Enjoy the photos of these Andean Flamingos and please tread lightly when you are a guest in their habitat.
Flamingos filter feed by scooping up the brine shrimp.
Flamingos aren’t the most graceful birds taking off.
We have lift-off!
Graceful in flight.
Flying in formation.
And not so graceful landings. But who cares? They’re beautiful birds and we should treasure them.
“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.” Mark Twain