LICENSED KIDS CAR GIFT

This 12V official-licensed upgraded kids ride on roadster with swing-up scissor doors is a realistic model of a Lamborghini Sain car, which will be an attractive Christmas/birthday gift for your 3-6 year-old toddlers to make them the eye-catching among their friends.

DURABLE STRUCTURE WITH SHOCK-ABSORBING WHEELS

Made from reinforced eco-friendly plastic (passed ASTM F963 and CPSIA), the motorized vehicle working on 4 wear-proof plastic wheels with comfortable spring suspension system is sturdy and stable for boys and girls within 55 lbs to explore the outdoors.

SAFETY DESIGN WITH 3-POINT BELT

Featuring a single seat with a 3-point safety belt, soft start/stop, limited speed (up to 3.1 mph), and remote priority function, the 12V toddler supercar is safe to play with parental supervision.

FOR THE FUN OF CHILDREN

MUCH FUN WITH SOUNDS AND LIGHTS

The battery-powered car comes with start-up engine sounds, functional horn sounds, and brilliant LED front/rear lights, allowing your boys and girls to showcase a cool cruise.

FOR THE FUN OF CHILDREN

CHARACTERISTICS

The Tawny Pipit is a large pipit, 6.3 inches long with wing-span 9.8–11.0 inches, but is an undistinguished looking species on the ground, mainly sandy brown above and pale below. It is very similar to Richard’s pipit, but is slightly smaller, has shorter wings, tail and legs and a narrower dark bill. It is also less streaked. Large, slim, sandy-colored pipit with a long and broad eyebrow, a prominent dark area in front of the eye, sparsely streaked back and breast, and a long and pointed pinkish bill.

RANGE AND HABITAT

The Tawny Pipit is a medium-large passerine bird which breeds in much of the central Palearctic from northwest Africa and Portugal to Central Siberia and on to Inner Mongolia. It is a migrant moving in winter to tropical Africa and the Indian Subcontinent.

DIET

The Twany Pipit occurs in open habitats with sparse vegetation and bare areas, on alpine meadows, pseudo-steppes and in arable fields. The diet consists mostly of insects, but also seeds are taken.

BEHAVIOR

Its song is a short repetition of a loud disyllabic chir-ree chir-ree. Its flight is strong and direct, and it gives a characteristic “schip” call, higher pitched than Richard’s.

The breeding habitat is dry open country including semi-deserts. The nest is on the ground, with 4-6 eggs being laid.

Twitchers Flock to See Rare Pipit

AN UNEXPECTED visitor has been causing a flurry of activity at a Wildlife Trust in Pembrokeshire.

Staff and volunteers of the Wildlife Trust of South and West Wales have been having a busy time dealing with hundreds of bird-watchers flocking to its normally peaceful Goodwick Moor nature reserve near Fishguard. The reason for the commotion was a Pechora pipit, which has never before been recorded in Wales.

The bird breeds in the tundra of the far north of Asia from Russia eastwards. It migrates over large distances, normally moving in winter to countries in south east Asia such as Indonesia and Malaysia, but occasionally seen in parts of western Europe in September and October. Normally the best place in western Europe to see the Pechora pipit is Fair Isle, just south of the Shetland Islands.

Around 300 avid bird-watchers from across the UK are thought to have been lucky enough to see the bird, including experienced wildlife photographer Melvin Grey, who took this picture.

Nathan Walton, the Wildlife Trust officer for Pembrokeshire, said the bird was mainly seen flitting through the willow and alder carr and hiding in long grasses.

“This is a fantastic little bird, and to have such a rarity appear for the first time in Wales on a Wildlife Trust reserve is even more special,” he said.

“The Pechora pipit certainly gave people something to talk about and was not put off by all the cameras and binoculars pointing at it.

“Sometimes it was happy to perch within a couple of metres of the patient crowd.”

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