Posts in Category: Merritt Island NWR

Florida! Wood Stork

Wood Stork: Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — A couple of Wood Storks in all their January finery. Is there a more handsome bird anywhere? Of course there is. Still the Wood Stork has an undeniable presence. I can remember my first sighting in Georgia, years ago, and how hard I worked for it, and how happy I was. My second sighting was in a ditch along the highway leaving the airport in Florida the very next year, out in plain sight in broad daylight, as they say. I have seen hundreds since, mostly on Blackpoint Drive at Merritt Island. These were among the first birds I saw after entering the loop this year. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 800mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Great Egret in proportion

Great Egret and American White Pelicans: Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — I don’t know about you but I think of Great Egrets as being big birds. The largest of our Egrets and Herons with an impressive wingspan and elegant carriage. Then you see them standing in front of a group of Pelicans and you realize just how small they really are…or how big the Pelicans are. Wingspan: Egret 4.5 feet. Pelican, twice that at 9 feet. Weight: Egret 2.2 lbs. Pelicans between 11 and 20 lbs, and up to 32 lbs. Pelicans are big birds! Egrets are just not even in the same class…so they cannot be big birds. Case closed. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 800mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Nothing so elegant!

Great Egret (2, and a Snowy looking on): Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — Nothing so elegant as a Great Egret in display. After taking a 1000 shots of the Snowy Egrets dancing on the water one morning at Blackpoint Drive, I turned to concentrate on the Great Egret action…trying to catch wings open and some of the confrontational displays. Again, this was in a pool where there were at least 50 Snowies and 25 Great’s feeding avidly, so I had non-stop action to choose from. Spoiled for choice! OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 454mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds in flight and action modifications. -0.3EV. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Osprey eye

Osprey: Biolab Road, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville Florida, USA, January 2024 — Biolab Road at Merritt Island can sometimes be productive, and sometimes turns up birds not seen on Blackpoint or views not gotten. This Osprey, perched on snag at the edge of the water at eye-level and near the road, was the highlight of the one trip I made down Biolab on this visit to the Space Coast. It honestly does not get any better than this! I just pulled up. Shut the car off to eliminate vibrations, and shot out the open window. The bird was totally unimpressed by my regard 🙂 It was still sitting there when I drove on. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 800mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. -0.7 EV. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Great Blue flyby

Great Blue Heron: Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville Florida, USA, January 2024 — Photographing Pelicans and Spoonbills in the distance, I looked up just in time to see this Great Blue Heron on approach. I got the camera into Birds in Flight mode with a switch of the control dial, panned with the bird, and shot off a burst as it passed me. Such a beautiful bird in flight. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 800mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds in flight and action modifications. Processed in Photomator and assembled in FrameMagic.

Florida! a stack of pelicans

American White Pelican: Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge. Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — There is a fair sized flock of White Pelicans hanging around Blackpoint Wildlife Drive at Merritt Island this year. The first days I was there I only saw them in flight, but it was certainly a sight to see. This is a five bird stack from a lock of at least 30 that went over. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 800mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds in flight modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Rosy in flight

Roseate Spoonbill: Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — Another hoped for image from any trip to the Space Coast of Florida: a Roseate Spoonbill in flight. There is noting like that pink wingspread. To my eye, it outdoes even the flamingo. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 436mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds in flight modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Skimmer

Black Skimmer: Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — Another of my “most wanted” birds and shots for my Florida trip this year: the Black Skimmer skimming. The hardest part is keeping the skimmer in an 800mm equivalent frame as it is moving so fast over the water, especially when it passes close. OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 800mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds in flight modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Social feeding

Great and Snowy Egrets: Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville, Florida, USA, January 2024 — The mass mixed feeding flock of wading birds got up and left the pools behind the entrance kiosk at Blackpoint Wildlife Drive just as I arrived soon after dawn on Sunday and flew away to the west. I did not find them again until later in the day, congregated in the small pond right beside the main Refuge road where it crosses the railroad tracks. This mass feeding behavior is common among Egrets and other wading birds as they follow the most recent hatch in various ponds around the refuge…often spending 3-5 days at one pond, only to move on, in mass, to another when the prey get sparse and fresh ponds beckon. As you can see from the photos, it takes a lot of prey this size to keep a Great Egret topped up. (The second photo is a crop from the first, showing the prey and the Egret’s tongue action more clearly. ) OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 200 and 420mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Photomator.

Florida! Tricolored being Reddish

Tricolored Heron: Blackpoint Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, Titusville Florida, USA, January 2024 — This Tricolored Heron has obviously been taking hunting lessons from the Reddish Egret, but it has developed it’s own routine which involves repeated leaps into the air instead runs through the water, and then the umbrella pose before the strike. It is a behavior I have never seen in a Tricolored…but then I have not, to be honest, spent a lot of time with Tricoloreds. I had a lot of fun watching this one hunt, and took way too many photos trying to catch the action. (I never think to switch to video until I get home to process the photos. Yes a video would have been nice 🙁 OM Systems OM-1 with ED 100-400mm IS zoom at 584mm equivalent. Program mode with my birds in flight modifications (to catch the action). Processed in Photomator.