![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjEN_nMX1nK_P3FlXaa0Mhyphenhyphen8vsWHWRxEtOC41CFEuaReIsSEfWrAD5tCw06o0hRrLf6VRNXQx1BTe-Hai-vc6lsEWu8TAa70Tn_M4eHW67dXhTRGo5HTKntw-ubYb03J6BQF1ITVORTQA/s320/Shama_white2a.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_hxRxUhM-OlD8nMtcTEti_07l23KY31CJLUFaOqqH2-V12bcdwtTIK-m2OjdHyyd1r26lUhAGfbxG4ceF0Bl2WJPB3n-1TejJ2PY10xpYd8AFm7bjMsVJpP4KmGv0IrEG3l7b_JUbYQ/s320/Shama_white1a.jpg)
Interesting note: the Shamas need not molt to change colour (about 2 to 3 months of food change), after the molt, colour will return to normal.
Will start feeding Apollo 6 next week to turn his tail white. Hopefully I get as good a result. Poor fella need to look different to attract some attention hehehe!
Otherwise, being short-tailed in a long-tailed bird world has its disadvantages ;)
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