![]() ► Music of relaxation and meditation to calm the mind and control anxiety : Our music to study contains brain waves, specifically Alpha waves, which increase concentration and the power of the brain to improve the memory and the intelligence. It helps you concentrate, pay more attention, focus and work in a more efficient way. ![]() The music to study of Musicoterapia is ideal to be able to focus in depth during the study and get the most out of it. ► Music to study, work, read and get focused : Let the soothing nature sounds of this forest scene, relax and calm you. It is a good idea to take some time away from your normal hectic schedule and relax. Take a few moments out of your busy day for relaxation and or meditation, sit or lie in a relaxing position and let these calming Nature sounds and images melt away your stress and tension. Take time with these relaxing nature sounds and allow yourself to relax and de-stress. Relaxation and meditation are very important to ones wellbeing. The calming sounds of nature are a natural tonic for mind and body. Peaceful piano music by Soothing Relaxation that can be used for sleep, work, studying, reading, meditation, spas, yoga, massages or simply enjoyed as it is. Takahē: Bird Of Dreams opens with a creative story about the hatching, matching and tragic dispatching of female Takahē Hāpara.Īt the festival’s Words & Wine session on Sunday Ballance will read extracts from her book.Wildlife Birds : Spring Forest Sounds and relaxing Bird Singing for Sleeping ![]() So I am just going to stand there and beam."īallance never studied broadcasting, creative writing or journalism, although story-telling is a constant in her life. It’s been a privilege to stand alongside them. I describe myself as an aunt to Doc’s kākāpō and Takahē recovery groups. It is run by the Department of Conservation and there, in November, she will MC the recovery programme’s 75th birthday party. The wildlife park is now called the Pununga Manu o Te Anau/Te Anau Bird Sanctuary. Ballance was a university student when she first met a Takahē at the Te Anau Wildlife Park in the 1980s. It is being released at the New Zealand Mountain Film and Book Festival, in Wānaka, tomorrow. ![]() They wait until they get through their first winter before they can be officially added to the population."īallance, a zoologist and science communicator, is the author of Takahē: Bird of Dreams, published this year by Potton & Burton. "It’s about not counting your chicks until they are fully fledged, until the first of October. "They are a bit like racehorses, they share a birthday. "It will be terrific for a bird that has been on a roller coaster for longer than 75 years". Natural history story-teller Alison Ballance, of Nelson, is confident Takahē will number 500 by October 1. Many things conservationists did to save the kākāpō (population now around 250) were tried first with Takahē, which officially number 475. It led to New Zealand’s longest running, threatened species programme. ![]() In 1948, Invercargill doctor, Geoffrey Orbell tracked the bird down in Fiordland’s Murchison Mountains. Photo: suppliedThat, though, is a small sample of the population that existed before killer stoats were introduced and beat a path to the beautifully plumaged blue-green birds with sharp red bills.įor a while, Takahē were considered extinct. ![]()
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