I love slow wildlife streams and consistently follow one at a time. Recently I found this stream from a puffin burrow on Seal Island (Maine, USA) managed by National Audubon Society.
There is currently one pretty big chick in the nest (named Burfle) that has just started shedding its fluff. You can also check out other streams from outside the burrow and the nearby ledge.
https://explore.org/livecams/puffins/puffin-burrow-cam
Norway excels in SLOOOW TV. Piip-show is staged like a café with birds enjoying their time in a birdhouse – – occasionally an errant red squirrel pops by awww
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=77&v=wUrejjlbISs&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.scandinaviastandard.com%2F&source_ve_path=MjM4NTE
almost brought to tears a few times I wish to see this on the Big screen one day
in awe of the perseverance that penguins have on their cold and treacherous journey
love and life is so precious!!!
ty Internet Archive!!!
Made by Cornell Lab of Ornithology
It is both a birder handbook and an incredible tool for identifying birds from pictures, sounds and step-by-step questions.
I enjoy learning more about local birds in my area or when I travel. It is completely free and without ads
this is worthy of celebration: the lack of video—autoplay video, noisy inane video, panicky video, algorithmic, dumb video, rabbit hole video, any video—on pi.fyi is a good thing