Rufous-backed Wren

Rufous-backed Wren: Hotel Bougainvillea, San Jose, Costa Rica, March 2025 — When I first encountered this bird in my Costa Rica travels, it was the Rufous-napped Wren, but that species and its multiple subspecies have now been split into three species, each taking a few of the subspecies with it. The birds in Costa Rica are now Rufous-backed Wrens. I am pretty sure the birds themselves have not been informed of the change…and they might not care anyways. That’s birds for you. This one, and its mate, were working on a nest in this cactus tree in the Bougainvillea gardens, and singing up a storm. Look at that throat extension! Unfortunately when I tried to show the wrens to my fellow travelers the next day, the tree had blown over in the night. 🙁 I hope the wrens found a new home. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Motmot on the ground


Lesson’s Motmot: Hotel Bougainvillea, San Jose, Costa Rica, March 2025 — There were more Lesson’s Motmots in the gardens at Hotel Bougainvillea this spring than I have ever seen there. At least 3 or 4 pairs when most years I have only seen a single pair. When Motmots are on the hunt, they are pretty much oblivious to human beings. This one swooped within inches of our heads several times and landed at our feet in search of whatever small wormy thing it was after in the grass. You can see clearly here what it was originally named the “blue-crowned” Motmot. There still is a Blue-crowned Motmot, with a solid blue crown and no central back spot with a restricted range in the forests of eastern Mexico, but the now separated Lesson’s ranges from Mexico south through eastern Panama. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600 and 382mm equivalents. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Orchids


Orchids: Hotel Bougainvillea, San Jose, Costa Rica, March 2025 — This was my first trip to Costa Rica during Orchid blooming season and there is no where better to get a taste of the variety of tropical orchids than the gardens of the Hotel Bougainvillea. It seemed like there was a new orchid around very corner. I don’t pretend to know my orchids and I am not sure what any of these are, but they certainly are beautiful. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at various focal lengths as needed to fill the frame. My macro settings (aperture preferred for depth of field). Processed in Photomator and assembled in FrameMagic.
TickTock

Lesson’s Motmot: Hotel Bougainvillea, San Jose, Costa Rica, March 2025 — You may have noticed the recent service outage here that Pic for Today. My March trip to Costa Rica is the first trip in a long time when I have not been able to keep up with Pics for Today posts. Perhaps it was because the days were particularly full, and perhaps it was because my wife Carol came along, and perhaps I am just getting old. 🙂 Anyway, we are back and regular service will now resume. This is a Lesson’s Motmot from the gardens of the Hotel Bougainvillea in San Jose where we spent two nights as the trip got under way. Lots of interesting facts about this bird. It nests in holes in banks. The rackets form because the feathers in the bare sections are loosely attached, and are used in mating displays and to attract flying insects, as they are swung like pendulums when the bird is perched. The name comes from the characteristic mot-mot call. And, of course, they are typical of many tropical birds in their beautiful colors. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Emerald Star of day one

Northern Emerald Toucanet: Mirador y Soda Cinchona, San Jose, Costa Rica, March 2025 — Generally the star of day one of my tours of Costa Rica’s Rain and Cloud Forests…a bird mostly of the foothills to high elevations, which we see at Cinchona just over the Continental Divide on our way from San Jose to Sarapiqui. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Resident Mottled Owl

Mottled Owl: Hotel Bougainvillea, San Jose, Costa Rica. March 2025 — The pair of Mottled Owls has been nesting and roosting in the big stand of bamboo by the swimming pool at Hotel Bougainvilleas for many years…exactly how many depends on who is telling the story. I first saw them in 2023. And they are here again to greet us. Carol and I just happened by this morning when the more visible of the two had woken up for a moment, to show us the eyes…not something I have had a chance to photograph in the past. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 @ 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Reflection action

Yellow-headed Caracara: Hotel Bougainvillea, Heredia, Costa Rica, March 2025 — We did not get to the Hotel Bougainvillea until just before sunset…but in time to catch this Yellow-headed Caracara having an argument with its own reflection in a metal clad chimney next door. I saw this, or another Yellow-head, the last time I stayed at the Bougainvillea, in December 2023, in exactly the same spot. 🙂 Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Male

Anhinga: Orlando Wetlands Park, Christmas, Florida, USA, January 2025 — As I mentioned previously, the Anhingas were just coming into breeding plumage when I visited Orlando Wetlands in January. This male is greening up around the eye. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent. (Again from the tour cart.) Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator. (Posting early as we have an early morning flight to Costa Rica. 🙂
Lunch


Anhinga: Orlando Wetlands Park, Christmas, Florida, USA, January 2025 — This Anhinga, a good distance ahead of us as we stopped the tour cart, was busy with a catch. It is apparently no easy task to maneuver the fish, once speared, down the throat. Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 600mm equivalent (plus a heavy crop). Program mode with my bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
Alligator Pano

Alligator: Orlando Wetlands Park, Christmas, Florida, USA — The alligators grow big at Orlando Wetlands, where the living, in gator terms, is easy. This one, fully exposed on the bank for some morning sun (and probably some digestion) was so close to the tour cart that at my widest zoom of 75mm, I could only capture pieces of the beast. So I took three exposures…head section, mid-section, and tail…with the intention of attempting to stitch them together as I would a landscape panorama. And here you have it, with the head-shot for effect! Sony a6700. Tamron 50-400 at 75mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator, stitched in Pixomatic and assembled in FrameMagic.