Black, white and yellow birdy
May. 2nd, 2019 05:48 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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I'm trying to ID a small resident bird in my back yard, with help of my venerable A Field Guide to Australian Birds.
If someone can explain the posting of photos to Dreamwidth in clear terms to me, I will be infinitely grateful. I did ask DW themselves but could not follow the explanation.
In any case, I haven't managed to get a picture of this bird yet and it's so quick I don't like my chances. He lives in a largeish, bushy eucalypt and is probably either a White Cheeked Honeyeater or a New Holland Honeyeater, whose descriptions, range and habits are almost identical until you get to the tail. The second variety has a white tip in the tail. Right. Spot a white tip in the usually invisible tail of an 18 cm bird that likes to stay in his home tree. These two species are surely first cousins!
This is a street tree just over my fence directly opposite my chair on the veranda, so the bird and I have got fairly used to each other over the three months since I moved in. I placed a bowl of water on the ground near some of my plants and I know the doves have made use of that, but don't know if the little bush birds would. He screeched loudly at me for some days when I first appeared but has calmed down now so perhaps learned to recognise me. The previous tenant had a dog here so this would not have been safe ground.
In any case, I haven't managed to get a picture of this bird yet and it's so quick I don't like my chances. He lives in a largeish, bushy eucalypt and is probably either a White Cheeked Honeyeater or a New Holland Honeyeater, whose descriptions, range and habits are almost identical until you get to the tail. The second variety has a white tip in the tail. Right. Spot a white tip in the usually invisible tail of an 18 cm bird that likes to stay in his home tree. These two species are surely first cousins!
This is a street tree just over my fence directly opposite my chair on the veranda, so the bird and I have got fairly used to each other over the three months since I moved in. I placed a bowl of water on the ground near some of my plants and I know the doves have made use of that, but don't know if the little bush birds would. He screeched loudly at me for some days when I first appeared but has calmed down now so perhaps learned to recognise me. The previous tenant had a dog here so this would not have been safe ground.
no subject
Date: 2019-05-02 10:33 am (UTC)https://www.dreamwidth.org/file/new
no subject
Date: 2019-05-02 12:39 pm (UTC)The "optional features" instructions include how to use this to post to a community: https://www.dreamwidth.org/manage/emailpost?mode=help&type=optional
howdy!
Date: 2019-05-02 05:25 pm (UTC)It'll look something like this: < a href= https:// rattfan.dreamwidth.org/file/name here.jpg'> < img src = https:// rattfan.dreamwidth.org/file/100x100/name here.jpg' />< /a >
Then you'd have your photo ready to paste into your entry. (I used a test image to make sure I got the right code - I also deleted some code to make sure it would show up in the comment.)
Re: howdy!
Date: 2019-05-02 10:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-05-03 12:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-05-03 03:52 pm (UTC)On your hosting site: Select "share photo", select size of photo to share. Choose the code for "photo only" and copy to clipboard.
In DW; post in Rich Text mode. Choose the icon with the little mountain on it. Copy your url for the photo into the box it provides.
Your photo should show up in your post.