When I was little, I used to regularly rescue drunken lorikeets that had
dropped into our family swimming pool after they had become inebriated on
fermenting grevillea flowers that overhung the water. They still bite
though!
Beth Symonds
St Lucia
On 12/2/06, Syd Curtis <> wrote:
I reckoned this posting on the US mailing-list <Naturerecordists> worth
passing on.
Am I right in thinking I've heard somewhere of rainbow lorikeets getting
inebriated? If so, on what?
Cheers
Syd
----------
From: Lou Judson <>
Reply-To:
Date: Thu, 30 Nov 2006 09:37:57 -0800
To:
Subject: Re: [Nature Recordists] Drunk robins
Thanks for the report! I grew up in Marin County, with a view over SF
Bay, and several Pyracantha bushes in the yard. Robins would regularly
get drunk on the lovely red berries and try to fly into the reflections
on the plate glass windows, sometimes falling two stories to the ground
below, where they'd lay dazed for a while until they woke up and
staggered off, taking a while to find their wings. Yes, good to keep
the kitties indoors!
<L>
Lou Judson € Intuitive Audio
415-883-2689
On Nov 30, 2006, at 9:00 AM, Wild Sanctuary wrote:
> Every year in this part of the country (N. California), the toyon
> berries ripen on the bushes still remaining in the non-agricultural
> undeveloped biological islands of Sonoma County. When the berries
> ripen, they ferment. Then - sometimes - the American robins gather in
> large numbers to pick away at them. After a while they get drunk and
> begin to stagger around the drive to our house, sometimes flying into
> windows and missing the phone and power lines when trying to land.
>
> This morning, a cold one (28F or -4C) in these here parts, was
> cloudless and beautiful except for the thousands of robins that
> descended on our property to partake of the seasonal delicacies. The
> soundscape was transformed and it's very noisy at the moment - a
> pretty funny spectacle. And we keep the cats inside.
>
> Bernie
"Microphones are not ears,
Loudspeakers are not birds,
A listening room is not nature."
Klas Strandberg
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