tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8278510471239667560.post1547658325747042007..comments2024-03-29T01:41:15.713+00:00Comments on Kensington Gardens and Hyde Park birds: Ralph Hancockhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11686354797977020917noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8278510471239667560.post-72938210360417756922021-10-31T22:31:11.148+00:002021-10-31T22:31:11.148+00:00It is very difficult to imagine how a Herring Gull...It is very difficult to imagine how a Herring Gull invented the worm dance. All right, once one of them did it the behaviour would spread, and indeed it has to the other three gull species commonly seen in the park. But there seems to be no instinctive pattering behaviour of gulls that might have been rewarded with surfacing worms and would have become a habit. It looks, incredibly, like an imaginative leap which one would have supposed was beyond a gull's mind.Ralph Hancockhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11686354797977020917noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8278510471239667560.post-20325400690577915842021-10-31T21:42:00.289+00:002021-10-31T21:42:00.289+00:00I am sure that a successful soap opera could be wr...I am sure that a successful soap opera could be written about the Blond Egyptian trio.<br /><br />Great video of the Herring Gull doing the worm dance. I wonder how they came up with the technique. I wish gulls kept records of the species' great achievements.TinĂºvielhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04794275230697959519noreply@blogger.com