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February 13 2009 Page 4 Features, Weather, Sports, Exchange

Magnificent Frigatebird: Ocean Thief

  

Frigatebird snatch.jpgTara Spears

                Second in seabird series.

magfrigatebird.jpgNext to the chunky pelican, the streamlined frigatebird looks aristocratic.  Thousands of these sleek seabirds live along the Riviera Nayrit coast.  When newly settled here I was walking the beach with my little dog and enjoying the flight of the seabirds until one of the large birds flying overhead lost its grip on dinner and it landed right in my path: a gigantic, live sea snake! I trotted home to identify this greedy bird that would grab a two meter long lunch.  Sure enough, the frigatebird is nicknamed ‘pirate bird’ for its propensity to steal food from other birds by snatching food drofrigate female2.jpgpped by other birds before it hits the water.

  As the photos illustrate, the frigatebird has an incredible flying ability, owing to their wingspan of over 2 m/6.5 ft with less than 2 kg/4 lb of bodyweight to support.  The distinctive hooked grey beak and long split tail make them easy to recognize.

 

The Magnificent Frigatebird's long, swallow-like tail enables it to make sharp turns, and its long, broad wings lift the bird with little effort. The Magnificent Frigatebird is most at home in the air because its short legs cannot walk, and its feathers absorb water, so it rarely rests on the ocean. It is interesting that the same species has coloration differences according to age and sex.  Females can be as much as 23% larger than males. Adult males are black with greenish shading over the back and a bright red throat sac that is usually deflated. Females are black overall with a whitish bar in the upper wings and a white vest across the chest. Young Magnificent Frigatebirds are also black, but with a white head, chest, and belly.

Magnificent frigatebirds are usually seen flying high on the air currents or gliding down to the water to snap up fish and squid. Because its feathers soak up water, the birds dive only briefly in pursuit of prey or a drink.  Although this seabird primarily eats fish, their diet is supplemented by fishery waste, immature seabirds, young turtles, and small crabs. That’s why so many congregate near the local fish markets: to feast on the entrails the fishermen toss out.

 

frigate male.jpgThis sleek seabird doesn’t reproduce until nine years old and lives for about 30 years.  Females do not breed every year because it takes a year and a half to raise a chick. It has been observed that males are believed to breed every year (with a second female). Unlike some other seabird species, the magnificent Frigatebird does not stay loyal to nest sites or its mate.

The frigatebird’s rough nest is constructed in low trees or on the ground on remote islands, such as lie in the Jaltemba BMale Frigatebird.jpgay.  A single egg is laid each breeding season with both parents covering it for about four months until the hatchling grows feathers. The mother frigatebird stays with her young for another six months.  The duration of parental care in frigatebirds is the longest of any bird.

Watching these graceful thieves is another great Mexican beach pastime!

Male frigatebird courting behavior:    

 

 

 

 

 

Contact Tara:   tara.sprs@hotmail.com

 

children at Casa de Los Ninos


 

 

 

 

 

 

Practice Horseshoes at Bill and Jan Poteat's House...just another great day in paradise

photographs by Dianna Belitski and Bill Bell

 


 

SPORTS

Chivas missing 3 for match against Necaxa

Chivas will be missing three regular starters when it faces Necaxa on Saturday in the Mexican league…..More Info Click Here

Adrian Gonzalez, brother Edgar lead Mexico's Mazatlan

Those who wonder why an All-Star such as Adrian Gonzalez would bother playing in the Caribbean Series …..More Info Click Here

Mens golf winners

1st with four under

second with  two under

third with one under

father and son

 

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Sexy and Stylish Swimwear for REAL Women

Laura Gelezunas - PVNN

 

 

 
Open Mon-Fri from 11 am-6 pm, and Sat-Sun 11 am-3 pm, Curvas Peligrosas is located at Juarez #178 in downtown Puerto Vallarta. Tel: (322) 223-5978
 
Curvy Gals, the only quality, plus-size swimsuit shop in Puerto Vallarta is Curvas Peligrosas. You can find Miraclesuit, Jantzen, Christina, Carol Wior and other quality labels in (US) sizes 12 to 40. And this season, due to popular demand, they are offering the same quality quality swim wear labels in sizes 8 and 10!

The owners, Robina Oliver and her husband, Carlos Vazquez, moved to Puerto Vallarta from San Francisco just to open the shop in 2007. While on an earlier vacation to the area, they decided that locals and visitors needed a place to purchase great swimwear in a "normal" size.

At Curvas Peligrosas you will find tank suits, tankinis with shorts, skirts and/or briefs, swim dresses, bikinis, two and three-piece ensembles, plus a smattering of clothes and pareos. You can stroll down the beach in style. All of this at a great price, too.

Robina is truly overwhelmed by the response of her clients. She proclaims that clients say, "They are relieved to be able to shop for a stylish swimsuit in a relaxed atmosphere and actually find something to fit them, and make them feel like a diva."

So when the sun is shining, the ocean is beckoning, and you are looking forward to relaxing on the beach and then you find yourself with nothing to wear, check out Curvas Peligrosas. You will be able to shop for the perfect size that is sexy, stylish and fun.

Located at Juarez #178, between Libertad and Augustin Rodriguez in downtown Puerto Vallarta one block from the "flea market" or Municipal Mercado, Curvas Peligrosas is open Monday through Friday from 11 am-6 pm, and Saturday and Sunday 11 am-3 pm. For more information call (322) 223-5978 or send an email to Robina at CurvasPeligrosasPV(at)hotmail.com.

 

 

 

 


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Last Week

 

US Vietnam Vets - Get Agent Orange Exam NOW!
David Lord - PVNN

 

 
Colon cancer and diabetes are just two of the eleven diseases that may be in the Dioxin exposed body health system.
 
All Vietnam veterans are urged to get an agent orange exam, NOW! Colon cancer and diabetes are just two of the eleven diseases that may be in the Dioxin exposed body health system. We start dying long before our time and it does not have to be.

I am urging veterans to ask for their free V.A. Exam for Agent Orange contamination.

Why risk not knowing whether you may have any one of 11 diseases and ailments linked to Agent Orange? The earlier a disease is detected, the better chances are of dealing with it before getting things like CLL (chronic lymphocytic leukemia.)

According to the Department of Veterans Affairs, approximately 20 million gallons of herbicides were used in Vietnam between 1962 and 1971 to remove unwanted plant life and leaves which otherwise provided cover for enemy forces during the Vietnam War.

Shortly following their military service in Vietnam, some veterans reported a variety of health problems and concerns which some of them attributed to exposure to Agent Orange or other herbicides. We fought for forty years, in fact we are still fighting for recognition of several other life threats due to exposures.

These exposures were repeated every time we drank the water from natural springs, rivers, ponds, even sleeping on the ground we were absorbing the dioxins by contact. We breathed in the Agent while passing through dense jungles just as sprayed, glistening foliage turned to reddish brown, oozing with thick chemical fumes, stinging eyes and burning throats.

We Marines turned down our sleeves on dirty, ripped jungle fatigues in the hundred and twenty degree heat to no avail, while our skin was perspiring, then in came the Agent Orange. We never knew what dioxin was then, our return home to months or years in hospitals, our wounds from bullets, blast, or fire, we never imagined a continued battle for life, especially 40 to 50 years later just when we expected to retire.

The Viet Nam War will go down in history, not for the war against the enemy that was won and then lost by unpopularity, but the war that chemically exposed tens of thousands of our own troops by our own U.S. Corporation; Dow Chemical.

Long past the battle on the field of valor, we the veterans of Viet Nam are still fighting and dying by the thousands due to exposure, not a medal will be pinned, not a word mentioned, as we are laid to rest from exposures to herbicide.

VA offers compensation and benefits for Vietnam veterans suffering from the following 11 diseases: Chloracne; Hodgkin's disease; non-Hodgkin's lymphoma; multiple myeloma; porphyria cutanea tarda; respiratory cancers (lung, bronchus, larynx and trachea); soft-tissue sarcoma; acute and subacute peripheral neuropathy; prostate cancer; diabetes mellitus (Type 2 diabetes); and chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

The Agent Orange Exam is a way for a veteran to get a good history and physical. It is a general check-up that is focused on looking to see if the veteran has any of the presumptive Agent Orange conditions.

Recently ALS and Diabetes were added as presumptive Agent Orange conditions. If a veteran previously had an Agent Orange Exam before these conditions were added and they carry either of the diagnoses, they do not have to have another Agent Orange Exam now. They need to take the documentation from their doctor showing they have on the presumptive Agent Orange diagnoses, along with documentation that they were in Vietnam, to David Lord, national service officer for the Military Order of the Purple Heart in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico so that they can begin the Compensation and Pension claim process.

My motivation is to have every Vietnam veteran receive an exam or get their rightful compensation, especially those now living south of the border. Many affected veterans then asked the next logical question: "Could my offspring be affected?" That's a simple question, and the simple answer is "YES!"
David Lord has been a National Veterans Service Officer doing veteran's benefits in Mexico for over a decade. David is a combat veteran, wounded by gunshot in Viet Nam 1968 and is a retired Marine. The Veterans Administration has played a critical role in his life, by his having both medical and compensation benefits. He uses his personal experience in the claims process along with having legal and credentialed Accreditation by the Department of Veterans Affairs. His use of Congressional approved Veterans Organizations, to steer veterans and dependants through the maze of regulations and entitlements due them from military service is outstanding. For more information, email him at david.lord(at)yahoo.com.

Click HERE for more Veteran Affairs with David Lord »»»

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