Spirit Guide of the day is Kite! Don't hide anymore, instead take off your mask and show yourself to the world. The next few days will require adaptability as you work with any changes or twists in your life, but none of this will be a true problem so keep calm and confident. Make sure your keeping up on a healthy diet and possibly take a Tai Chi or yoga class that focuses on breathing and slow movements. Take time each day to stop and take several slow, deep breaths, counting to ten on the inhale and to ten on the exhale. The Kite Spirit Guide is connected clear sight both in vision and within your mind. Increase your visionary power by working on your observational skills. Meditate on the connections between your boy and mind so that you can create a deeper grasp of your own reactions and thought patterns. In this way, you can allow yourself to be open to greater opportunities that you may not have seen or allowed yourself to accept previously. People who connect with Kite seem to glide through life without getting ruffled feathers, able to master any opportunity that comes to them while being able to connect with others in a graceful and kind way full of respect. These individuals have a natural gift for connecting with the spirit world, helping the spirits they come in contact with and prefer warmer climates to cold ones.
Kite is a common name for birds of prey within the family Accipitridae, including species such as the Red Kite featured here, the White-tailed Kite, and the Black Kite. The Red Kite is described in Britain as their most beautiful bird of prey, coveting plumage of a variety of colors from black and grey to chestnut and reddish-brown. The underside of the wings have a bright white patch that contrasts sharply with their deep black wing-tips. These birds are known for their dramatic, deeply forked tail feathers used as a rudder for flight. Red Kites have a wing span up to 5.5 feet from wingtip to wingtip, enabling them to have a beautiful soaring flight. The Red Kite lives primarily in Europe, present in Britain throughout the year while other birds in Central Europe migrate south to spend winter in Iberia. The Kite requires open habitats, usually near woodlands as they fly over grasslands and farmlands to hunt for food. Nesting and roosting are kept to the woodlands. These are an adaptable bird, found throughout lowland landscapes as well as moorland and rough pastures in the upland fringes. Hunting for live prey such as invertebrates, small mammals, and other birds, Kites are mainly scavengers and have been known to eat a wide range of animal carrion including rabbits, sheep, and even refuse. Nesting occurs in the fork of trees or sometimes built on old crow nests, being an untidy arrangement of sticks lined with sheep's wool and decorated with a variety of man-made materials such as plastic, paper, and even clothing stolen when left outside to dry. This habit of stealing clothing left out to dry gained a reputation for the birds, even being referred to by Shakespeare in 'The Winter's Tale": "When the Kite builds, look to lesser linen." Red Kites are monogamous creatures that pair for life, often clutching one to four eggs in April with the majority of the incubation done by the female. The male will stay close to the nest as a guardian, keeping away attacks by crows and other nest robbers. The young Kites will leave the nest around seven weeks old, but will remain dependent on the parents for food for up to four weeks afterwards.
Kite is a common name for birds of prey within the family Accipitridae, including species such as the Red Kite featured here, the White-tailed Kite, and the Black Kite. The Red Kite is described in Britain as their most beautiful bird of prey, coveting plumage of a variety of colors from black and grey to chestnut and reddish-brown. The underside of the wings have a bright white patch that contrasts sharply with their deep black wing-tips. These birds are known for their dramatic, deeply forked tail feathers used as a rudder for flight. Red Kites have a wing span up to 5.5 feet from wingtip to wingtip, enabling them to have a beautiful soaring flight. The Red Kite lives primarily in Europe, present in Britain throughout the year while other birds in Central Europe migrate south to spend winter in Iberia. The Kite requires open habitats, usually near woodlands as they fly over grasslands and farmlands to hunt for food. Nesting and roosting are kept to the woodlands. These are an adaptable bird, found throughout lowland landscapes as well as moorland and rough pastures in the upland fringes. Hunting for live prey such as invertebrates, small mammals, and other birds, Kites are mainly scavengers and have been known to eat a wide range of animal carrion including rabbits, sheep, and even refuse. Nesting occurs in the fork of trees or sometimes built on old crow nests, being an untidy arrangement of sticks lined with sheep's wool and decorated with a variety of man-made materials such as plastic, paper, and even clothing stolen when left outside to dry. This habit of stealing clothing left out to dry gained a reputation for the birds, even being referred to by Shakespeare in 'The Winter's Tale": "When the Kite builds, look to lesser linen." Red Kites are monogamous creatures that pair for life, often clutching one to four eggs in April with the majority of the incubation done by the female. The male will stay close to the nest as a guardian, keeping away attacks by crows and other nest robbers. The young Kites will leave the nest around seven weeks old, but will remain dependent on the parents for food for up to four weeks afterwards.
Category Artwork (Traditional) / Animal related (non-anthro)
Species Avian (Other)
Size 965 x 1280px
File Size 334 kB
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