Posts in Category: action

Breeding Brandt’s

Brandt’s Cormorant in breeding plumage and posture, La Jolla Cliffs, California

This morning we pop back to San Diego and the San Diego Birding Festival to pick up this breeding plumage and posture Brandt’s Cormorant from the cliffs at Scripps Park in La Jolla California. We watched two birds trying to build nests on the same small ledge for 20 minutes or so…repeatedly stealing the meager nesting materials from each other, and spending more time defending than gathering. Eventually one flew off, undoubtedly in search of more nesting materials, and the remaining bird promptly stole all of the absent birds stuff. There is a joke in there, about California maybe, but I will restrain myself.

The birds were close enough to the cliff top so that I only needed 800mm of equivalent reach for this close-up. Nikon P900. 1/320th @ ISO 400 @ f5.6. Processed in Lightroom.

Seal pup…

Harbor Seal pup, Children's Pool Beach, La Joya CA

Harbor Seal pup, Children’s Pool Beach, La Joya CA

Dropping back a few weeks to my time in San Diego for the San Diego Birding Festival, here is collage of three shots of the same Harbor Seal pup from Children’s Pool Beach in La Joya California. The pup is probably a few days old, and was enjoying the beach.

Nikon P900 at 1500mm equivalent field of view. 1/500th @ ISO 100 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom. Assembled in Phototastic.

Honduran Green Heron

Green Heron, Cuero y Salado Wildlife Refuge, Honduras

So, is a Green Heron in Honduras more exotic, more tropical, than a Green Heron in Maine? The Green Heron is my favorite North American Heron, so, of course, I am delighted to find it anywhere. This bird, standing on a floating log along the edge of the main channel at Cuero y Salado National Wildlife Refuge on the Caribbean coast of Honduras is certainly all a Green Heron can be. I saw several in Honduras, looking and acting just like the ones I had seen a week earlier in Florida, or a month later in San Diego. Always a treat…and always exotic and tropical as far as I am concerned!

Nikon P900 at 1100mm equivalent field of view (before cropping). 1/500th @ ISO 200 @ f5.6. Processed and cropped for composition in Lightroom. It was taken from a moving boat on the river, so framing was not perfect 🙂

Titmouse in the Snow

Tufted Titmouse. The yard, Kennebunk Maine

The Titmice came back to our feeders about a week ago, after a late winter absence. This Tufted Titmouse shot was taken on the second day of spring 🙂 and is a celebration of our spring nor’easter. I think he looks very stoic there on his branch. Every few moments he would fly across to the feeders and take a seed, then return to this same branch to digest.

Nikon P610 at 1440mm equivalent field of view. 1/250th @ ISO 220 @ f6.5. Processed and cropped for composition in Lightroom.

Ballerina wantabe.

Canada Goose, Day Brook Pond, Kennebunk Plains Wildlife Management Area

If there were a prize for the heaviest bodied bird…the Canada Goose might well be in the running. The size of the body is emphasized in this shot of a goose standing on one leg, ballerina like, in Day Brook Pond on the Kennebunk Plains Wildlife Management Area. I like the pose, and I like the way the light is reflected back from the water on the body of the bird.

Nikon P610 at 1440mm equivalent field of view. 1/400th @ ISO 100 @ f6.5. Processed in Lightroom.

Rufous-tailed Hummingbird. Rio Santiago Honduras

Rufous-tailed Hummingbird, Rio Santiago Nature Lodge, Honduras

Outside here in Southern Maine, we are well into a spring snowstorm. About 3 inches on the ground as I write this and perhaps another 3 expected before noon. On the second day of spring! That is life in the northern latitudes. So, as an antidote, we will drop back 6 weeks to my time in Honduras, and the Rufous-tailed Hummingbird taken at the Rio Santiago Nature Lodge on the slopes of Pico Bonito.

I will return to Hondruas in June, at the height of hummingbird season, and we will spend at least one day at Rio Santiago. You can come too! It is a Point and Shoot Nature Photography adventure. Bring you camera and a Point and Shoot attitude, and we will have a lot of fun with the birds, mammals, butterflies, flowers, and landscapes of Honduras, all from the comfort of the the world class Lodge at Pico Bonito…in the company of fellow Point and Shoot photographers. Great photo ops, good learning, and great people. Visit my Point and Shoot Nature Photographer site for more information.

Nikon P900 at 1500mm equivalent field of view. 1/400th @ ISO 640 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom. (We will have lots of time to learn to photograph hummers like this, and, for those who want it, even instruction in post processing).

This is your chance. Great pricing for a great Point and Shoot photo adventure.

Turkeys

Turkey, the Yard, Kennebunk Maine

Turkey, the Yard, Kennebunk Maine

 

Carol came running
early to the bedroom,
“turkeys in the yard,”
and I went running
barefoot and still wet
from the shower, camera
in hand, out the front door.

Indeed, four big birds
in full spring finery…
feathers aglisten in the
morning sun with
colors rarely seen,
(barely imagined).

They strutted mindlessly,
as only turkeys strut,
(I know they call it
a trot but it’s not…
something between
a strut and a stroll)
up the middle of the
road to the neighbor’s
yard where they circled
back just in time
to be a Turkey heart
attack for the lady
in the SUV taking the
corner on Brown
Street a tad too fast.

They scuttled (again
a better word than trot)
through another yard
into the relative safety
of a patch of forest
and where gone.

Ah to be as mindless
and a carefree as a
Turkey in the spring.

(Well, no, maybe
not that mindless.)

Snow Bunting

Snow Bunting, Kennebunk Plains Wildlife Management Area, W. Kennebunk ME

Snow Bunting, Kennebunk Plains Wildlife Management Area, W. Kennebunk ME

We had amazing skies yesterday afternoon and of course I went looking for a venue to feature them. They were coming in from the west, so after a few shots from the beach looking inland, I headed out to the Kennebunk Plains Wildlife Management Area…one of the few places in forested Southern Maine where you have a decent horizon in all directions. The Kennebunk Plains are a remnant sand plain habitat, traditionally kept open by wildfire, and now managed with fire for several endangered and marginal species in New England and southern Maine. Black Racer snake, Northern Blazing Star (wildflower), Upland Sandpiper, Wood Lily, etc. Not to mention the abundant wild blueberries (not endangered but rare in Southern Maine), or the occasional amazing skies.

I was back in the car, actually backing out, and the first drops of rain were falling when a flutter on the ground between me and the edge of the parking lot caught my eye. I stopped and rolled down the window, then went for my camera. At first I thought it might be a Longspur of one variety or another but I soon realized that it was a Female Snow Bunting. I can’t not say for sure, but I think it might be a life bird for me…and certainly a first in Maine. It was all by itself, and I had the impression that it was running ahead of the storm. It was certainly feeding frantically along the edge of the grass.

This is a 4 panel collage of the bird so you can get a good look. Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/400th @ ISO 400 @ f6.5. Processed in Lightroom and assembled in Coolage.

Reddish Egret Lights Up

Reddish Egret, Merritt Island NWR, Titusville FL

It seems like my last three trips run together, though they where spread over more than a month in real time. Maybe it is because they were such photographically productive trips. The birds were the best they have been at Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge in many years. Honduras was amazing, even better than a year ago, and San Diego had all the usual subjects on display, AND I had two excellent days in Anzo Borrego Desert with flowers in bloom and a Desert Bighorn encounter. I brought home over 700 keepers from each of the three trips, and I have only shared a very few of them. That makes me feel image rich and time poor 🙂

This is Reddish Egret standing against the sun. It is not obvious, except in this pose, that the reddish base of the bill is actually translucent. I saw the same thing on Black Skimmers later this same day, and have already posted a pic of that effect…but I never would have guessed that either bill would let this much light through…would light up like this with the sun behind. This is off Black Point Wildlife Drive at Merritt Island NWR.

Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/500th @ ISO 320 @ f6.5. Processed in Lightroom.

New Born

Harbor Seals, Children’s Pool Beach, La Joya California

Harbor seals can give birth on land, on floating ice, or in the water. This is, I think, a new-born Harbor Seal, making contact with its mother for the first time out of the water. They identify each other by sniffing each other’s breath. I was in San Diego at the height of the pupping season for Harbor Seals, and saw many new-borns on the beach at Children’s Pool in La Joya just up the coast. I have never seen an actual birth. One of these years I will be there at just the right time.

Nikon P900 at 1600mm equivalent field of view. 1/500th @ ISO 320 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom.