Cherry blossom season is for birds in Brooklyn.
In Greenwood Cemetery, the overwhelming pink trees are also a time for an unusual local scene – a crowd of fluorescent green monk, which wanders in the branches to enjoy the annual spring feast.
Fruit lights in the tree are a favorite meal for brutal birds, which makes them a mixture of colors in the unique branches of cherry blossom in the cemetery.
“We have a beautiful collection of Japanese cherry trees that are really offered. Cherry flowers are fast-walled-but monk parrots are about a year,” said Sara Evans, director of living groups at the cemetery.
“If the cherry flower season makes you excited to visit Greenwood, they are likely to be more enthusiastic – they surprise more than this type of participation with wildlife that may be unexpected.”
There are up to 75 of the brutal monk to live in the famous cemetery-where myths such as Jean-Michelle Basquayat, Leonard Bernstein, Frederick August Auto (Food and Agriculture Organization) have been developed for rest.
Local Lore claims that the species, the original for Brazil and Argentina, came to Big Apple decades ago when it was imported to John F. Kennedy as part of the pet trade – but they fled and spread all over the five town.
Evans said that a large number of residents resorted to the cemetery, as they converted the corners and the Kurds from the Gothic Corridor to a residential building of the size of birds “build and maintain it constantly.”
Birds are rude and far from reaping the benefits of the cemetery full of flowers-especially during the cherry flower season.
Evans said: “I have just seen them hanging and eat buds from cherry flowers.”
“Often you will only see a monk parrot of fallen flowers, but you will also see in trees that eat food. In the first place you choose live branches to return to their nest.”
“You will always hear them before you see them because they are loud and happy.”
Bruooklyn Birders, who flow to Greenwood throughout the year to enjoy green birds.
“It is the most beautiful garden in Brooklyn – as soon as you overcome the crawl factor,” Michael Castilian, 76, from Park delop, told the Press on Wednesday.
“I was taking pictures of [parakeets] For years. I wait for the trees to open so that I can watch them as it eats the buds. “
Winston, an urban biological diversity specialist in the Bird Alliance in New York City, described Greenwood as one of the best bird stations in the metro region – partly thanks to its green population.
“I actually think that all birds are very excited about these birds,” Winston said. “It is beautiful and interesting,” Winston said.
“Performed parrots are very smart. They have an interesting lifestyle in their societal apartments.
The parrots have already begun to eat a graffor of cherry blossom trees that grow this year, especially on the Yoshino cherry tree, which began to flourish last week.
The cloud -like white trees are about 80 years old and Battle Hill, the highest point in Brooklyn and where the largest battle occurred in the American Revolutionary War.
Real cherry blossoms are likely to be shown in the next week or two weeks, when Evans expects the PRUNUS SERRULATA-chunted, pink and huge cherry trees-explodes throughout the cemetery.
And if watching the green parrots that eat wonderful cherry trees is not entertaining enough, Ivans suggested that visitors visit small birds at dawn or dusk.
“They have their own daily routine. If you are in Greenwood through Hour Golden Hour and the sun sets, you will see all the parrots return to the nest to enter the night – and you will see some parrots that float on the sunset only,” Ivs explained.
They literally love to watch the sunset every evening. Then in the morning, you will see them slowly out of the nest and love, bathe in the sun to warm up before they go out of a feed. They are really nice. “