Snake

Garter Snake: Emmons’ Preserve, Kennebunkport, Maine, USA, May 2026 — I know snakes are not everyone’s favorite creature, but they have, to my eye, a beauty all their own. Not cuddly by any means, but if you admire efficiency, the snake is kind of elegant with efficiency. And it is hard to miss the intelligence in the eye. This is a relatively large Garter snake, going on 4 feet long, and rather than slither away under the leaves, it chose to freeze in place, head up and alert. I spent 10 minutes with it, and it was still in this pose when I walked on. Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary at 450mm and 77mm equivalent fields of view. Program with bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator and assembled in FrameMagic.
Trout Lily with visitor

Continuing with Trout Lilies from my visit to Emmons’ Preserve in Kennebunkport, Maine, this week. I keep looking for one I could frame against water, and eventually found this one growing close to a small stream, only 18 inches wide at this point, that runs down to the river below. I tried some close-ups and then backed away to use the telephoto effect to catch some texture in the water while keeping the lily sharp. Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary at 424mm equivalent field of view. Aperture program with macro modifications. f/22 for depth of field. The visitor (the bugs were active around the flowers) appears to be Lycidae (lace-winged beetle) of some sort (according to Google). Processed in Photomator.
Trout Lily again

Trout Lily (Adder’s Tongue, Dogtooth Violet): Emmons’ Preserve, Kennebunkport, Maine, USA, May 2026 — Trout Lily has so many names partially because each name comes from a different part of the plant. Trout comes from the pattern on the two leaves of the mature plant, which resembles the pattern on a brook trout. Adder’s Tongue comes from the shape of the immature plant’s leaves (and remember the plants take 4-7 years to mature and there are generally 99 immature plants for every one mature). Dogtooth comes from the white “tooth” on the bulb of the plant if you dig it up. However, it is definitely a lily, not a violet. (I looked it up 🙂 Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary at 135mm equivalent. Aperture program with macro modifications. f16 Processed in Photomator.
Trout Lily

Trout Lily (Adder’s Tongue, Dogtooth Violet): Emmons’ Preserve, Kennebunkport, Maine, USA, May 2026 — My first trip to Emmons’ to look for Trout Lily a month ago, there were no leaves even showing. Yesterday I found them well scattered through all the likely spots, but not in bunches as I have seen them the past few years. I looked it up. Only 1% of Trout Lily plants flower each year. Those are the mature plants with two leaves. It takes between 4 and 7 years for a plant to mature, and maturation depends on the amount of sunlight the plant receives between the leaves emerging and the canopy closing over them. They tend to grow in patches where the spring canopy is thinnest and because they spread through a shared network of roots underground. On the plus side, if you view all the Trout Lily plants in a forest as a single organism, the trout lily in reactively undisturbed forests might be 1000s of years old. This is apparently a year when only a few plants have reached maturity, and when the already mature plants apparently did not store enough energy to produce a bloom this year, so flowers are few and far between. And many are very small (perhaps first-year blooms). It took me a long time to find a very few of what I would call full-blown Trout Lilies. These two were half the size of some of the others I found, and the ones I have come to expect. Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary at 105mm equivalent field of view. Aperture program with macro modifications: f22 for depth yielded 1/30th @ ISO 100. Working at ground level off my tiny tabletop carbon fiber tripod. (One of my best purchases ever!) The main limiting factor was the wind.
Pretty pidgins

Rock Doves: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2026 — This pair of Rock Doves verily likely has a nest under the bridge on the way into our local beach. I am seeing them on almost every visit now. I am not sure that is a good thing, all things considered, since they are active nest predators of both the protected Piping Plovers and Least Terns that share the beach a few hundred yards away. I would not be surprised if Fish and Wildlife moved them on when nesting season is in full swing. Still, they are very handsome birds, especially these throwbacks to the original wild stock, with their subtle grays and that amazing iridescent green and violet, bright pink feet, and orange eye. And they are graceful flyers. I often mistake them for falcons on the wing. Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary at about 500mm equivalent field of view. Program with bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
On the beach

Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2026 — It seems we humans always want to improve the landscape—and certainly change the landscape whether we intend to or not. This old, bleached tree with its roots has been on the beach as long as I can remember, and it is a lovely thing—I am not sure why anyone would feel the need to turn it into a somewhat ragged-looking hut. And of course, someone is missing those lobster pots. Still, the universe has a way of creating harmony out of apparent discord, and this image somehow still hangs together and speaks of peace. Maybe it is the clouds? Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary at 35mm equivalent field of view. Auto with Landscape Mode selection. Processed in Photomator.
Plovers do what plovers do

Piping Plover: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2026 — Besides the mating behavior I shared a few days ago, the Plovers on the beach were very busy feeding. I was watching the way they tap the sand rapidly with a forward foot and then swoop down on the creature they stir up. Moist sand or totally flooded sand, they use exactly the same technique. Clearly it works for them. There is a snippet of video to show the action. As often as I have watched plovers, this was the first time I had “seen” this. Which is what I love about watching birds (or humans for that matter, but when I watch humans this intently, it tends to make them nervous). Sony a7CR. Tamron 50-400 at about 1000mm equivalent field of view 700 for video, which is also cropped slightly. Program with bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator (video in LumaFusion).
Kestrel

American Kestrel: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2026 — On my way into the beach to look for the first Piping Plovers of the year, a Kestrel took off from the top of one of the 15-foot-tall maples that now line the road. Too late to even consider stopping, but I told myself to look for it on the way back out. I was, as it happens, running late by the time I left the beach, good plover opportunities and a long conversation with a birder by the cars having ensued, and I almost forgot. But the Kestrel was there, probably in the same tree (though all the trees look the same), and I had to stop and roll down the window for a few awkward shots. I did not dare move the car or get out. I considered it a miracle that the Kestrel continued to sit there while I got the window down and the camera up. The light was not ideal, behind the bird, and the angle was awkward, but still, we take what we can get (and are generally happy to do so—since it is always more than we deserve or can reasonably expect). And the Kestrel is, if I admit to having favorites of any kind (which I seldom do), my favorite raptor—only it isn’t actually. The falcons are, modern genetics tells us, meat-eating parrots. And there is an image to conjure with. Only makes me like Kestrels more. Sony a7CR. Tamron 50-400 at about 800mm equivalent field of view. Program with bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.
The beach and sky

The problem with panoramas is displaying them. This panorama, stitched together from five 24mm equivalent field of view shots in Bimostitch, closely replicates the 180-degree field of view of our eyes, but getting it to display on a digital display without losing all detail requires some trickery—like the surround in this finished image. I hope it works. I am a fan of dramatic skies, and of course, this image is much about the sky as it is about the landscape. The expanse of beach is impressive, but the sky really makes the shot. Sony a6700. Sigma 16-300 Contemporary. Auto with auto Landscape Scene Mode selection. Processed in Photomator and assembled in Bimostitch.
Piping Plover action



Piping Plovers: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, April 2026 — The Piping Plovers are back on our local beaches and showing signs of mating behavior. This is good. Piping Plovers populations in Maine are slowly rebounding from a historical low in the early 80s of 6 nesting pairs to last year’s number of 170 nesting pairs. If you visit southern Maine beaches, you will see the roped-off nesting areas. Please do not violate them. You will also see Piping Plovers running loose on the beach. Please respect their space. Please stop before the birds react to your presence and go well around them. If you want a closer view, stop where you are, before the birds react, and stand still. Very often, the birds will come to you. I have never been able to figure out way, but it happens consistently enough so that I now expect it. All of these photos were taken with a very long lens (after cropping in the 1000=1200mm equivalent field of view range), and I stood still and waited for the birds. After taking these photos, I continued to stand until the birds had moved well away. Even so, it is not something I would do every day. Once a week is about my limit. And I remind tourists on every visit. Mind the ropes, control your kids and pets, and do not chase the birds. Still, Plovers nest successfully on visited beaches for a reason—not simply because there is nowhere else for them to nest. Human activity means there are fewer predators. Dogs mean no cats or foxes. Human presence discourages gulls and pigeons from opportunistic feeding on eggs and chicks. Often, there is a paid nest monitor on sight to further protect the nests and chicks. As long as we respect the birds, we get to enjoy them, and they produce more viable chicks to aid the recovery of the species. Win-win, as they say. Sony a7CR. Tamron 50-400 as above. Program with bird and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.