He's a perceptive bird, Joe.
For example, he noticed how many people have homes on golf courses in the US. He theorizes that in the US golf must be more than merely a game; it must also be a lifestyle. (As a bird he found that quite confusing, since birds don't have a lifestyle, they only have a life.)
He found curious as well the fact that, though GB&I was once a global colonial power, it does not seem to have greatly influenced gca in other parts of the world, nor to have broadly exported its unique brand of golf. (He wondered out loud what power the Americans, on the other hand, hold over a far away country like China -- the courses there clearly having their roots in the American style. He asked me if the US, unbeknownst to him, was a colonial power today.)
He found it interesting, all around the world, that golf courses seemed to be either right in the middle of a very large city or right in the middle of absolutely nowhere. He openly marvelled at the adaptability of the human species, ie that we could be comfortable in two such distinct habitats.
(Speaking of which -- we did, him and me, share the shock of realizing how many courses there were in places where there was no water and no grass! Like I did once, he'd made the short flight from Los Angeles to Las Vegas and recapped what he saw this way: "Desert, desert, desert - golf course. Desert, desert, desert - golf course")
There were many other things the bird told me, but I had no context for them -- never having travelled very far -- and so I couldn't understand. Maybe some others here might.
Peter