their head but feathers too. Which brings me to one of the most famous peafowls, the Indian Blue. There are three types of Indian Blue Peafowls: The Peacock (male), Peahen (female), and Peachick (baby/offspring.) These Indian Blue Peafowls, like all, other animals belong in the biggest Kingdom, the Animal Kingdom. Like humans and other animals they have a Phylum which is a Chordata or having a backbone. Even if these peafowls don’t fly much, and when they do only to get away from predators and up
Peacocks Peacocks are very unique birds. They have the ability to live and thrive in rural and urban settings. Peacocks are known for being a vibrant and beautiful bird due to their beautiful tail feathers that open in a spray of color. Less known is that they are also very important to the food chain. I chose to write about Peacocks because of the way they live, the way they look, and how for many years I lived among them. When I see Peacocks, I am often reminded of Matthew 6:26-29 that says 26
Noun Biology. a special type of natural selection in which the sexes acquire distinct forms either because the members of one sex choose mates with particular features or because in the competition for mates among the members of one sex only those with certain traits succeed.1 Attraction and certain traits are an important part in the selection of a significant other. Certain people are attracted to that muscular baseball player out at first base, while others could be into the photographer kneeling
into their pieces. O’Connor mentions several times that she sees herself as one of the peafowl, yet, for the most part, they ignore that she is present. “If I refer to them as ‘my’ peafowl, the pronoun is legal, nothing more. I am the menial, at the beck and squawk of any feather worthy who wants service” (O’Connor 7). O’Connor suffered from lupus and spent much of her time on her farm, a slave to the peafowl and a slave to her illness. It is not surprising that she would like to feel like she belonged
Flannery O’Connor: The Mysteries behind Her Writings Mary Flannery O’Connor was born on March 25, 1925 in Savannah Georgia to Edward and Regina O’Connor. She was their only child. Her father was a real estate agent, and a veteran of the World War. Mrs. O’Connor, the mother, was pretty much a stay at home mother. She was Flannery’s biggest inspiration. In the early years of Flannery’s life, she attended Vincent Grammar school and Sacred Heart Parochial school for Girls. During this time, her father
Dam Building on the Yom River The proposed for Kaeng Sua Ten dam project has provoked controversy for more than ten years. Due to fierce objection from the locals, the government's aspiring aims to construct the dams in Phrae province's Tambon Sa-Iab may never leave the drawing board. The government declared that the dam was essential. It would reduce flooding, ease seasonal drought areas, and lead to agricultural development. Dams are a crucial component for industry and hydropower and attracting
and Juno. Flannery adds humor to this article by stating “I knew that the peacock had been part of the bird of Hera, the wife of Zeus, but since that time it had probably come down in the world- the Florida Market Bulletin advertised three-year-old peafowl at sixty-five dollars a pair”. According to Mayer, Hera the goddess of wives and protectress