People love transforming their faces into cute dogs or cats with Snapchat - but you know what's better than a human with an animal filter - a beautiful bird with no filter. Bored Panda has compiled a list of best snapchats of wild and pet birds caught on camera just chilling and doing their thing, sometimes in some very odd places.
From unlikely feathery friendships between birds and other household pets to birds in their natural habitats to birds trying to fit in with different winged breeds this delightful list is sure to bring a smile to the face of bird owners, aficionados and admirers. Scroll down below to check out the funny snapchats and don't forget to upvote your favs!
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We might think of parrots as the masters of mimicry but in fact ravens kept in captivity are just as likely to pick up human speech and sounds if not better than parrots. In the wild ravens sometimes are known to imitate other animals or mimic predators so they can attract them to carcasses that they can't break open on their own. If that's not a smart bird, we don't know what is!
This one reminds me an episode of that entertainment/documentary show about animals I catch on TV every now and then. There was a cat who was raised by a hen, then the cat grew up and had her own babies. Guess what the cat did? No, she didn't eat the hen, she left her babies for the hen to take care of, while she is wandering around free, as if she never kids in the first place.
Ostriches may be known for their giant eggs, but little is said about their giant eyes - which are the largest eyes set on any land animal. That's right their eyes are the size of a billiard ball, which is 2in (5cm) in diameter, measured front to back, from the center of the cornea to the retina - five times bigger than the human eye.
Have you ever been eating outside and had your meal ruined by an invasion of ants crawling on your food or even worse on you! Well if you were a cardinal this would be a welcome scenario. This bird species likes to cover their feathers or crushed and living ants. While scientists still aren't sure the reason behind this anting, their best guess is that the birds use the formic acid secreted during this practice to help get rid of lice and other parasites.
Letting out a fart in any circumstance is definitely impolite and embarrassing, but especially at the dinner table. Well, if you want to have a classy dinner don't invite the worm-eating Bassian thrush, they find their prey hiding under leaves by farting directly on them. The gas moves the leaf-litter and dislodges the worms - yum.
Have you ever seen your friend yawn and then tried to turn away before you 'caught the yawn?' Well this behavior of contagious yawning is seen in very few creatures other than humans, such as dogs, chimps and lab rats. Budgerigars, or budgies, a common parakeet, are the only bird species/non-mammal scientists have observed so far that also exhibit this behavior. So if you have a parakeet try not to yawn around them!
I love the mock pout that all baby and fledgling birds seem to have. Makes them look like real-life Angry Birds
I wouldn't be able to resist and had given in and gave him the phone case...
Love how different they are bright blue boys and soft grey girls. This is a beauty of a photo
This is how I like animals kept, on farms, running free, not in slaughterhouses, crammed up in tiny cages. I like how chickens look like elderly ladies trying to see neighbour's baby.
I laughed longer at that caption than any pun deserves. I am not proud.
"can i keeeeeep it mom?! i promise to take good care of it! pleaaaaaaaaaaaaaase?" *puppy eyes*
He/she knows it's a fake, and is showing the humans how stupid they are.
Hard to get any studying done with those floofers hanging out by your window
Re; something said in the texts. I can make my cat yawn by yawning at him. and vice versa. .... If you are going to keep birds PLEASE keep more than one. Birds live in flocks and family clans, To keep one alone - especially if you work and leave it alone - is cruel.
Depends on the type of bird and the bird itself.
Load More Replies...Very nice! One night I was traveling home from our lower university campus. They had just finished construction on a new science building complete with glass roof. As I walked the path to home, I saw two girls staring and pointing at the building. I said "Who's jumping?" They said "No... there's an owl on the building." Illuminated in the light coming from inside the building stood a huge great horned owl. He looked like he was the king of his territory. As I continued on my travels, I heard bats flying in the direction of the science building. A loud screech from the owl and those bats made a beeline in the opposite direction.
In the 70's my sister found a baby injured magpie. She gave him to my dad who just had a massive heart attack. As they both recovered together they really bonded. Named him Max. He talked but only repeating what my dad said. Dad and I built him a huge aviary. Max would call our dog Shorty to come here then drop food down to the dog. He also would purposely put chicken bones close to the cage edge and when the cats tried to reach in to steal it he would peck them. He was really an intellegent character. Miss him.
Re; something said in the texts. I can make my cat yawn by yawning at him. and vice versa. .... If you are going to keep birds PLEASE keep more than one. Birds live in flocks and family clans, To keep one alone - especially if you work and leave it alone - is cruel.
Depends on the type of bird and the bird itself.
Load More Replies...Very nice! One night I was traveling home from our lower university campus. They had just finished construction on a new science building complete with glass roof. As I walked the path to home, I saw two girls staring and pointing at the building. I said "Who's jumping?" They said "No... there's an owl on the building." Illuminated in the light coming from inside the building stood a huge great horned owl. He looked like he was the king of his territory. As I continued on my travels, I heard bats flying in the direction of the science building. A loud screech from the owl and those bats made a beeline in the opposite direction.
In the 70's my sister found a baby injured magpie. She gave him to my dad who just had a massive heart attack. As they both recovered together they really bonded. Named him Max. He talked but only repeating what my dad said. Dad and I built him a huge aviary. Max would call our dog Shorty to come here then drop food down to the dog. He also would purposely put chicken bones close to the cage edge and when the cats tried to reach in to steal it he would peck them. He was really an intellegent character. Miss him.