MKinHK
Mike Kilburn

Thanks Jeff and Gretchen
I agree that the Crested Mynas look like gangsters. In reality they're too foolish to be truly sinister. Greater Coucal, on the other hand is a thoroughly seedy character, sneaking along inside bushes looking for anything to scrag.
There are a couple of other birds here with pretensions of gangsterhood, or at least dress for the part - I've posted a short clip of a calling Masked Laughingthrush here (the other bird you can hear calling is a typically noisy Black-necked Starling). They stand out as being the most easily seen and noisy laughingthrush, but they have about the same idiocy rating as Crested Myna.
Much more elegant, Long-tailed Shrike is very much the immaculate assassin. Today I watched one catch and make very short work of a large hornet, but I was too slow for a pic. The one below was more co-operative.
Other birds in the same area included at least three Red-flanked Bluetails, a couple of Little Buntings, which have been scarce this winter, a couple of calling, but secretive Siberian Rubythroat, an immature male Grey-backed Thrush, the wintering Wryneck put in another appearance and a male Blue Rock Thrush of the red-bellied race philippensis.
Behind the village a gang of Hair-crested Drongos were exploring the edge of the fung shui wood while both Greater Necklaced and Black-throated appeared briefly from the same patch, and an Ashy Drongo flew over.
Cheers
Mike
I agree that the Crested Mynas look like gangsters. In reality they're too foolish to be truly sinister. Greater Coucal, on the other hand is a thoroughly seedy character, sneaking along inside bushes looking for anything to scrag.
There are a couple of other birds here with pretensions of gangsterhood, or at least dress for the part - I've posted a short clip of a calling Masked Laughingthrush here (the other bird you can hear calling is a typically noisy Black-necked Starling). They stand out as being the most easily seen and noisy laughingthrush, but they have about the same idiocy rating as Crested Myna.
Much more elegant, Long-tailed Shrike is very much the immaculate assassin. Today I watched one catch and make very short work of a large hornet, but I was too slow for a pic. The one below was more co-operative.
Other birds in the same area included at least three Red-flanked Bluetails, a couple of Little Buntings, which have been scarce this winter, a couple of calling, but secretive Siberian Rubythroat, an immature male Grey-backed Thrush, the wintering Wryneck put in another appearance and a male Blue Rock Thrush of the red-bellied race philippensis.
Behind the village a gang of Hair-crested Drongos were exploring the edge of the fung shui wood while both Greater Necklaced and Black-throated appeared briefly from the same patch, and an Ashy Drongo flew over.
Cheers
Mike
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