Red-crowned Crane - Wang Keju's Photo Works

Click on image thumbnails to zoom

Red-crowned Crane - Wang Keju's Photo Works

By Wang Keju

SKU# 19887

$ 50.00

Pp. 120; 150+ color photographs of the red-crowned crane. Publisher’s original red cloth, lettered in white on the spine and front cover, embossed crane on the front cover, housed in red cloth covered hard slipcase, lettered in gilt on the spine and front of the slipcase, square lg 4to (12 x 12 inches).  Inscribed by the author on the front endpaper.  The red-crowned crane dances gracefully, with dozens or hundreds of continuous changes in dance movements. The red-crowned crane courts the opposite sex by showing its body color, dancing and calling. The red-crowned cranes fall in love freely. When the mate relationship is determined, they will stay together for life. If one dies, the other will never marry again.  The crane nests are located in the reeds surrounded by water on slightly higher ground. When building the nest, the male and female cranes work together, and the diameter of the crane nest is about 1.5 meters. Red-crowned cranes usually lay two eggs in one nest every year. Each family consists of a "couple" and one or two "children". The incubation period of red-crowned cranes is generally 29-31 days. Two days after the young cranes hatch, they begin to roam around the nest area and feed with their parents. Red-crowned cranes are migratory birds. They begin to migrate to the warm south in October every year. In March of the following year, the red-crowned cranes will migrate from the south to the north again, returning to their breeding grounds in the north. It takes more than a month to fly a distance of more than 2,000 kilometers.

Publisher

Fine Arts Publishing House
Publisher Place Harbin, Heilongjiang, China
Date Published 2010
Date Published Estimated No
Edition First edition
Number of Volumes 1
Reprint No
Condition Fine
Condition Description A fine copy in a fine slipcase.
ISBN 978-7-5318-2627-9
Limited Edition