@@survivor3745 한국의 국조를 뽑는다고 하면 가장 많이 거론되는 새는 까치인데, 실제로 1964년 국제조류회의(ICBP)한국본부와 한국일보가 주최한 '나라 새 뽑기 운동'에서 총 2만 2780표 중 9373표로 까치가 1위를 차지한 바 있고, 32년 뒤인 1996년 정부 여론조사에서도 까치가 1위를 차지했다. 그리고 까치는 한국 지자체가 지정한 상징새 중에서 가장 많이 채택된 새이기도 하다. 까치가 공식으로 지정된 국조는 아니지만 민간에서 젤 많이 뽑힌 새임 까치랑 한 컷에 같이있으니 신기하네요^^
I also had my CC off. And you tube thinks I'm from east Asia about half the time, so I wasn't shocked. But, without this comment I would not have found the translations. Thanks for letting me know those were there.
여기 평택입니다. 22개월 애기가 새덕후님 영상을 너무좋아해서 보다가 저도 덩달아 같이 좋아하게 되었어요 제가 살면서 새 보려고 하늘을 올려다보며 직박구리다! 라고 말할날이 올줄이야...그런데 오늘 집앞공원에서 후투티를 봤어요!!!!! 여느때와 같이 애기에게 비둘기 날아간다 하는데 갑자기 머리에 노란뿔이 있는새가 있는거예요! 근데 제가 그 새 이름을 알줄이야 ㅎㅎㅎ 반가워서 댓글남깁니다 덕후님 건강하세요!
You captured such exquisite images of a fabulous bird! I've never heard of the Eurasian Hoopoe, but I shall never forget this charming little fellow. You filmed him so well as he ate his lunch that we can admire his expert eating technique in all its wonder. What a dextrous diner he is! Thank you so much.
No, you don’t. You can be mentally adept or adept at using your body to do certain things too. That’s what my dictionary app says. Other dictionaries say it just means you’re proficient at doing something.
Thank you for your hard work filming this amazing bird. He’s beautiful and so smart. I was surprised at how many people passed by and did not notice him. You have a lovely park. 😊
7:51 저번에 할아버지가 시골에서 발견하구 사진보여주면허 무슨 새인지 아냐고 너무 예쁘게 생겼다구 하면서 물어보셨는데ㅋㅋ 어진님한테 디엠으류 여쭤봤더니 알려주셔서 할아버지한테 알려드렸던 기억이있어요ㅋㅋ그 새가 후투티 였는데 영상에서 보니 더 귀엽네요ㅠㅠㅎㅎ 할아버지가 새이름을 알고 너무 좋아하셨어요ㅋㅋ!! 그때 정말 감사했습니다ㅎㅅㅎ
후투티가 정말 볼만하네요 특히 까치가 쫓아 올때 머리털 펼치는게 넘 예쁩니다 원앙과 후투티는 정말 보는 재미가 있습니다. 부리는 도요새를 닮아서 갯벌에서 갯지렁이나 잡아 먹을줄 알았더니 풀밭에서 도요새처럼 벌레들만 쏙쏙 빼머는게 정말 기특합니다. 토종 조폭 까치는 정말 대단하네요 나와바리는 확실히 지키는군요ㅋ
꽤 오래전 강릉의 송정바닷가 해송숲에서 보았는데, 상당히 오랜시간을 한 곳에 머물러줘서 자세히 볼 수 있었습니다. 녀석과 함께 숨쉬고 있다는게 행복했고요 자연을 잘- 보존해야 하겠다는 마음이 아주 절실했습니다. 윤무부 교수님을 조류박사로 만들어 준 바로 그 새이기도 하죠 ?
It appeared to me that the Magpies were not intent on harassment but having observed the Hoopoe's success at procuring food, were positioning themselves for a chance to steal some of that food. Superb filming and editing and music. Bravo!
20여년 전 대부도에서 포도농장을 하고 있을 때 포도가 한 참 알이 배는 초여름에 이 새를 처음 보았다. 바닷가 야트막한 소나무 숲 근처의 포도농장에서 다음 해도 그 다음 해도 매일 생활하길래 이름은 알 수 없지만 텃새인 줄 알았다. 그 후로 인천 만월산 부근 주택가에서도 가끔 눈에 띄곤 했다
Bonjour de France, merci beaucoup pour ces vues magnifiques. Même en ville , nous pouvons les observer. … si nous sommes attentifs! Il y en a dans mon jardin de temps à autre. J’arrête alors ce que je fais pour les admirer. Merci encore.
Magpies are such trouble, lol- but it’s hard to stay too mad at a bird with such a big personality. One of them divebombed my cat while she was having a stroll on the lawn and I’ve never seen her so shocked, lol. Thanks for getting this footage, the hoopoe is such a delightful little bird.
When my cat used to lie in the garden, magpies used to creep up and give a little peck on his tail. The cat would just lift his head up, and look at it as if to say, do you mind, I was asleep.
Funnily enough, I've never seen magpies do these divebombing attacks here in Romania, ever. Nor did anyone else I talked to, and there are alot of magpies (close to my house there's an extended family that grew to around 12 this year). I guess it's a learned behavior and it just didn't reach these parts?
I live in California and have never seen a magpie (the only magpies we have are only found in certain parts of the state and I live near the coast). However, I have seen the exact behavior you're talking about (dive-bombing my cat) from American crows. I think it's likely just a corvid behavior in general. Highly intelligent animals can seem michevious at times... but there's something about crows. The more I watch them, the more I notice them mobbing red-tailed hawks. In the same way a hawk is considered a threat, so too is a cat, even if the cat is minding its own business at the time. What's interesting is that in more remote parts of California (at the coast line and in the forest, mostly) common ravens seem to replace the American crow, both in ecological niche and behavior. I have seen ravens doing the same thing, chasing away hawks by pestering it as a group. So I think that whatever the predominant corvid is in your area, they will be up to something, teasing and divebombing those they see as a potential threat.
@@em4703 I've never seen a magpie in my area either, but the feisty Mockingbird will definitely dive bomb, attack, accost a cat who is just minding her own business, because BIRB has a NEST nearby. Mostly they just scare crap out of her, so she maintains a wide berth. Every nesting season, it seems, the local News show does a feature on Mockingbirds attacking hapless workers making their way to the office. Tourists get their share of it too. It is kinda funny.
it seemed to me the magpie was mostly trying to snag the little bugs the hoopoe was getting. it realized that its getting food somehow and wants it, but cant get it on its own, so it tries chasing the hoopoe to make it drop the bug
For a magpie, it looked quite extravagant: > Tri-colouration (black, white and blue). > Long-ish tail feathers. While the hoopoe was cute, I've never seen a magpie like that!
Thank you so much for this video! Reminded me of my childhood. In the area where my grandparents used to live there were lots of these birds. As kids we often found their nests in between rocks in stone fences. The adult birds never let us get too close . I always enjoyed their bright colors. ❤️
Reminds me of when my mom adopted a green Quaker Parrot and put his cage up against the huge front windows, and all these female birds from other species kept gathering on the bushes to check him out and sing to him, while the male birds looked really agitated. Lol
Probably agitated cause he was imprisoned in a cage and he wanted to go fly among the other birds. Birds shouldn't be kept in cages, birds are meant to fly, flying is their happy place.
@@waterbird91 He was a rescue from someone else who purchased and couldn't keep him. He is also able to leave his cage whenever he wants and it has a perch on top of it. In fact, if you lock the cage he knows how to unlock it. Thing is, quaker parrots are actually very territorial nest builders, so he chooses to spend most of his time in his cage because he feels comfortable there.
I'm not a bird-watcher. I just stumbled across this video. I am in admiration of the patience of bird-watchers and nature photographers. Any random person or animal can spoil your shot or video, but you wait patiently day after day looking around the whole place searching for the little bird you want to shoot. That is a level of patience I simply cannot imagine. Respect.
Let me add my thanks for your wonderful camera work and letting us see a little of the urban life of this wonderful bird. So many terrific moments: deep excavation, dust bathing, the fantastic toss of the bug back into his mouth, and last but not least, being bullied by the magpie(s). Really, even if you don't already know birds are wonderful, how could you not know after watching this wonderful few days in the life of the Eurasian hoopoe of the Upupa genus and the epops species in a city park. Just delightful camera work - many thanks 🙏🏻😊
Many thanks for introducing me to a brand new bird friend! And, yes, magpies are brats, but it’s only because they are extraordinarily intelligent and have a wicked sense of humour. Again, thank you!
They have a sense of self and a sense of other. The crested bird barely had 2 screws going around in its head. Most small birds are dumb as fuck. So don't feel bad if they get fucked with. They barely know whats going on and are not afraid. They only sense danger and food. The magpie doesn't represent danger. If the crested bird were smarter it would be annoyed but it's not capable of that. It's pretty fucking dumb.
진짜 너무 귀엽다... 새덕후님의 영상을 보면 마음이 편안해지면서 또 영상마다 다른 이쁜 새들의 모습을 볼 수 있어서 좋은 것 같아요 차분한 영상 속에 새덕후님의 새에 대한 진심이 담겨있어서 저까지 새들이 너무 사랑스럽게 보이네요☺ㅎㅎ 항상 아리따운 새들의 모습을 영상 속에 담아주셔서 너무너무 감사해요 저도 새덕후님의 영상을 보면서 새덕후가 될 것 같네요ㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋㅋ 보고만 있어도 힐링되면서 너무 행복해지네요..🌟❤
I’m more and more in awe that there are people all over the world that enjoy getting out and watching birds do bird things. It makes me happy in a weird giant family sort of way. Thank you for adding subtitles!! Love having the translation.
What a lovely video and beautiful birds. Even the magpie had brilliant colours instead of the usual black and white. I saw a documentary years ago saying that birds peck the ground in order to make the bugs think it’s raining so that they will come up to the surface. Thanks for taking the time to film everything. 🥰
후투티가 딸기하우스에서 가끔씩 발견되어요~농부들이 특이한 새가 딸기를 쪼아먹는다며 새를 잡아서 올린 사진 댓글에서 이름이 후투티라는걸 알게 되었었네요 전 디게 신기하고 이쁜 새다라고만 생각했었는데 댓글창에는 이 녀석 때문에 딸기훼손이 심하다는 댓글들이 제법 되더라구요 근데 몇 달 뒤 후투티가 우리 농장 앞에도 나타났길래 매번 하우스 안에 못들어오게 주위를 잘 살피며 들어갔었던 기억이 있네요
It always warms my heart when watching nature, any animal, bird or fish, is so amazing and rewarding. I totally understand why you do what you do, and you do wonderful photography, especially this beautiful and unique bird for someone from the U.S. We have a large variety of birds here, and they are all beautiful in my opinion. This fellow you got pictures of is especially pretty and so smart! Thank you for educating me on this hoopoe, I never knew he existed! 👍The Magpie is funny too. I think he wants to be friends 🤗
Stumbled upon this video by chance. Very entertaining, well put-together; English subtitles much appreciated! We get hoopoes in Britain although I had never seen one there. I live in Japan now. Thank you for uploading this.
까치가 미워요. 제가 가끔 가는 공원도 꽤 큰 연못이 있는 늪지여서 이런 저런 새를 볼 수 있었는데, 까치 세 마리가 다른 종 한 마리를 공중에서 집단으로 쪼아대고 공격을 하더라구요. 그 이후로 그 공원에서 까치 만한 사이즈의 다른 종류의 새들은 거의 못보게 되었고 완전히 까치 세상이 된 느낌이었어요. 약간 깡패 기질이 있는 듯 ㅠ.ㅠ
This bird used to be our national bird for a long time in the country I live in, we rarely see them lately. They’re really pretty and they have a beautiful call.
@@AshrafAnam Magpies tend not much turn up in the "rarely seen" category, urbanized hyperadaptive generalists that they are. Their distinctive vocalizations usually aren't characterized as "beautiful" either.
You're correct when you say that you find interesting things in nature if you just look. We had a woodpecker come and start pecking at the caulking around my window frame years ago. I paid attention, never bothered him, but felt lucky enough to see him super close since he couldn't see into my room during daylight. Through the years, I got to see him come back time and again, and he has a family I bet now! He came by with his mate this year, and I think his son last year! He's got darker and thicker stripes than a normal woodpecker, but still that signature flash of red on the crown. We're in suburban Phoenix, AZ, so where he came from (and his mate), I don't know, but I'm very appreciative to get that little glimpse of nature.
1:21 Oh my goodness! What a gorgeous bird! I LOVE its crest! 🥰 I've never heard of this bird before. Thank you for sharing! 🙂🎄⭐✨ Btw, chickens and roosters take dust baths, too. And I don't blame you for disliking the Magpie. They will actually attack and eat other birds (at least the US ones will). It's too bad because Magpies are super smart, beautiful birds, too, but they are definitely little bullies!
@@simplyk6965 How awful! They definitely are ruthless. I hope the bird in this video survived the magpies. I think they were targeting him because he didn't have a flock of his own to protect him. 😥
Heh ... Magpies do the same in Russia. But if the magpie is not careful, the falcon will eat it. For about 3.7 billion years, there has been life on Earth, and all this time someone has been eating someone else. This is not something bad, this is the norm of life, otherwise life will disappear. :-)