Every year, from February to April, 80 percent of North America’s sandhill crane population stops in Nebraska to eat and rest before finishing their lengthy migration to the northern reaches of Canada, Alaska, and even Siberia. Tourists flock (sorry) to nearby towns such as Kearney, Nebraska, to watch this spectacle take place. Some half a million cranes stop to wade through the shallow braids of the Platte River in the valley here, feasting on crop residue from the many cornfields in the area.
A rest stop for the birds
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Happy Arbor Day!
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World Wildlife Day
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Ancient groves in Australia
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World Rivers Day
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Atop the roof of Africa
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Adorable activism
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World Space Week
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Porto Timoni beach, Greece
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Pretty in pink, and purple, and red…
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The Door County Coastal Byway in Wisconsin
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Arbor Day
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Petroglyphs near Fruita in Capitol Reef National Park, Utah
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A memorial in Germany
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Did they forget to fly south?
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Merry Christmas!
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National Find a Rainbow Day
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Happy Astronomy Day!
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A species worth defending
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Hiding in plain sight
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Karlovy Vary, Bohemia, Czechia
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Glendurgan Garden hedge maze is 186 years old
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Bathing in the light of Pride
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World Reef Awareness Day
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Celebrating Minnesota’s statehood
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The Bazaruto Archipelago of Mozambique
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Spring equinox
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Wild scene on the Merced River
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Let the holiday shopping commence
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Bear Hole Brook, Catskill Mountains, New York
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Burchells zebras for International Zebra Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

