Snowy Egret Dance

Snowy Egret dancing at Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park in Christmas, Florida, USA. All part of an Egret’s day. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Wood Stork close up.

Who you calling ugly! The Wood Stork, seen here close up at Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park in Christmas, Florida, USA, is, it is safe to say, not a pretty bird. It is majestic. It is interesting. It is, for those who appreciated such things, even beautiful. But it is not pretty. I remember how excited I was to see my first Wood Stork, years ago, in Georgia. It was only a glimpse through dense brush, but it was certainly memorable. In Florida, they are common in most any wetland, and I have, by now, been really close on several occasions. Every sighting is still memorable! Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Anhinga’s wing.

A kind of supplement to my Pic for today. A close-up of the wing patterns of the Anhinga. Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park, Christmas, Florida, USA. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Anhinga

The Anhinga is such a strange bird. It starts of course with the snake like neck that gives it its unofficial name in many regions (snake bird), but then its body is covered all over with fur-like feathers, and its wings, when it folds them out to dry, feature this fascinating pattern of black and white. And “fascinating” is not too strong a word at all. Even the way it sits here, with its tail flat on the ground, is pretty strange to me. Altogether a strangely beautiful, but very strange bird. Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park, Christmas, Florida, USA. Sony Rx10iv at 218mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Wood Stork and Snowy Egret

Wood Stork and Snowy Egret at Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park, Christmas, Florida, USA. An interesting size comparison. I don’t think of the Snowy Egret being a “small” bird, but it looks pretty small compared to the Wood Stork when they are feeding together. White birds in the sun are always an exposure challenge. Sony Rx10iv at 265mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. -.7EV. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Red-winged Blackbird!

Red-winged Blackbird in full display at Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park in Christmas, Florida, USA. Orlando Wetlands is a municipal wetlands…a series of settlement ponds that has been converted to a park primarily for birders…but being only about 30 minutes from Orlando, it also attracts joggers, walkers, cyclists, and folks just wanting to get outside for the morning. It offers great sky and water views, and, of course, great birds at relatively close distances. This Red-winged Blackbird was holding court in the top of a bush right beside the dike trail and I said to my Point and Shoot Nature Photography class, “too bad there is not another male around so we could see them display…” and, of course, another male flew in and we got to see this. You can see a bit of motion blur in the epaulettes and the neck feathers as the bird was literally vibrating with passion as it vocally assaulted its rival. Red-wings are famous for it! Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Purple Gallinule

There were more Purple Gallinules at Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park in Christmas, Florida, USA this year then I have ever seen before…or perhaps, because one of biggest ponds was dredged over the winter and has no vegetation, they are just all concentrated in the front ponds this year. This high-stepping specimen put on a good show, feeding and dancing on the water weed. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Cedar Waxwings among the frozen cherries (Bonus pic for today)

Suitable for framing! (or to make a 1000 piece puzzle 🙂 Three Cedar Waxwings among the frozen berries of an ornamental Cherry tree at Roger’s Pond Park in Kennebunk, Maine. Sony Rx10iv at 365mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Great Blue Heron in the rain.

Great Blue Heron in the rain at Orlando Wetlands Scenic Park, in Christmas, Florida, USA. I had a Point and Shoot Nature Photography Workshop at Orlando Wetlands one morning during the Space Coast Birding and Wildlife Festival. We spent the first hour waiting out the rain under the shelter at the entrance, but when it did let up enough for walking this was the wader we encountered. Still raining a bit, but there is nothing quite like the mixed textures of the plumage of a Great Blue Heron to catch the eye. Worth a look in any light. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr and Apple Photos.

Cedar Waxwing

Cedar Waxwing, Kennebunk, Maine, USA. A whole flock of Cedar Waxwings was working the ornamental Cherry Tree at Roger’s Pond Park in Kennebunk when I visited, looking for Eagles, just after noon yesterday. Though others found Eagles (I have seen the photos on Facebook) I did not…but the Waxwings were hard to miss. They were in and out of the cherry tree, very busy with the frozen fruit. I was able to work my way pretty close, and though they flew off to the the big Maples over the river, they quickly returned to their feast. Beautiful birds in a beautiful setting. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Polarr. There is a poem.

A flock of twenty-seven Cedar

Waxwings work the frozen

berries of the ornamental

cherry tree at Roger’s Pond Park

just after noon today. Freezing

rain over night left each berry

encased in a shell of ice…

but the birds are avid, sometimes

fifteen in the tree at once,

picking the berries out of the

shells and popping them whole.

Perhaps, like Eiswein grapes,

the freeze concentrates the

sugars and makes the sour cherries

easier on Cedar Waxwing pallets…

or somehow more nutritious…

or maybe they are just on to

something we humans know

nothing about. I am almost tempted

to try a frozen cherry myself,

(though I know they are only

ornamental) to see what the

Cedar Waxwing fuss is all about.