Immature Chipping Sparrow

Immature Chipping Sparrow: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, August 2025 — Standing in the open deck door waiting for hummingbirds to come to the flowers or the feeders on our back deck, I could not resist grabbing a few shots of the Chipping Sparrows in their immature finery. So elegant. So fresh. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Cedar Waxwing

Cedar Waxwing: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, August 2025 — while watching for the fledgling Red-tailed Hawk to do something interesting I was occasionally distracted by other birds working the brush where the stream crosses under the road. Several times I caught Cedar Waxwings in the berries across the road, never completely showing themselves, and really too far for exceptional feather detail, but still worth a photo. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent (with a heavy crop). Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator and assembled in FrameMagic.

Rusty-patched Bumblebee?

Rusty-patched Bumblebee: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, August 2025 — So, according to google this is a Rusty-patched Bumblebee, once common in Maine, but now quite rare, endangered, both in Maine and all through the northeast. I have done my best to confirm that it is actually a Rusty-patched and it looks like it is. If anyone knows better please let me know. It is enjoying foraging in Sweet Joe-Pye-Weed in a little marshy area on the banks of the Mousam River where an effort is being made to restore native vegitation. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program with my insect modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Exactly what she thinks of me!

Fledgling Red-tailed Hawk: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, August 2025 — This is after she buzzed me and resettled on another perch. She definitely did not think much of me! Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 @ 600mm equivalent. Program mode with birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Hawk again

Fledgling Red-tailed Hawk: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, August 2025 — Two more poses from my session with the newly fledged Red-tailed Hawk on Saturday. Such a pretty bird! Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Hawk story

Fledgling Red-tailed Hawk: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, August 2025 — So a longish story about this newly fledged Red-tailed Hawk. I was on my e-trike on the way to the beach, only about a half mile from home, coming down into a little dip where a stream crosses under the road by the new (unfinished) Rachel Carson NWR headquarters, when I heard a Red-tailed Hawk calling loudly overhead. A big adult Red-tail flew out of the trees ahead of me at the bottom of the dip and off over the buildings toward the river behind, but one was still calling close so I stopped. I searched the heavy pine where the call seemed to be coming from but only saw another large adult when it flew out and up the stream in the opposite direction. Ah well. Still there was a hawk calling, somewhere deeper in the forest…not as loud, but there. And then it flew out and up into the top of another tall pine at the brow of the hill back toward home. It bounced around in the dead branches up there until it found a perch and settled down. It was actively calling and I thought maybe one of the adults would come to tend to it, so I got my little collapsible stool off the trike and took a seat in the shade against the fence that will be the Rachel Carson fence when they finish and open the Visitor Center. I watched that hawk like a hawk, as they say, for almost 2 hours, waiting for it to do something interesting or for one of the parents to come back. Of course I took just under 600 photos of that hawk doing nothing much of anything while waiting, and I have a photo of about every pose it struck. (Some of which you will probably see before the week is out.) These two shots are of it at its most active, when calling. When it finally did decide to do something, of course it was the last thing I expected. It took off and flew right straight at me, passing over my head at about 3 feet, just clearing the fence, and landed on the ground at the base of a tree about 30 feet beyond the fence. I had my camera ready for action, but I was not ready for that. It was up in a further tree behind the fence by the time I got fully focused on it again. Still, a great time. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife in action modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Egrets

Great Egrets: Kennebunk Bridle Path, Kennebunk, Maine, USA July 2015 — I thought these egrets were too far away but, hey, it is only bound electrons, so nothing ventured, nothing gained. And then they did this. I love spread wing shot and none so much as the Great Egret wings. So these two shots, offered as one, just or more fun. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent (and heavily cropped). Program mode with bird and wildlife modifications. Highlight metering. Processed in Photomator. Assembled in FrameMagic.

Seaside Dragons in love

Seaside Dragonlet mating wheels. Kennebunk, Maine, USA, July 2025 — Down by the Bridle Path through the tidal marsh the Seaside Dragonlets were bush mating and ovipositing. There must have been a dozen pairs in the one small pool I observed. Busy busy. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my insect and action modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Ho hum…just another singing Song

Song Sparrow: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, July 2025 — down by the beach on the inside of dunes, and singing…ho hum, just another Song singing…but he is putting his whole heart into it, and maybe that makes it special enough. 🙂 Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Swallows

Barn Swallows: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, July 2025 — You never now what is in store. On an uncomfortably hot day in Southern Maine I went out along the marsh path and found a tree just full of fledgling swallows, mostly barn, but a few tree as well. I took lots of individual shots and then switched to my action modifications and zoomed wider to see what I could catch. 1/4000th of a second. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 198mm equivalent. Program mode with action modifications. Processed in Photomator. Assembled in FrameMagic.