Showing posts with label Snowy Egret. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Snowy Egret. Show all posts

Friday, March 10, 2017

Big White Birds

Just because, here's some photos of the big white wading birds of Florida.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Snowy Egret, Greek Cay
the more I look at this one, the more I like it (Snowy Egret, Green Cay)

Some of the birds at the wetlands parks are quiet used to people and go about their business within a few feet of the boardwalks.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Egret, Green Cay
up close and personal with a Great Egret at the Green Cay boardwalk

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Egret, Wakodahatchee
Great Egret hunting, Wakodahatchee Wetlands Park

Cattle Egrets were happy to get close as well. At Wkosahatchee, a bunch of them flew up onto the boardwalk railing only a few feet away from us.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cattle Egret Wakodahatchee FL
no, you back off

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cattle Egret Wakodahatchee FL
Let me tell you something, buddy...

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cattle Egret Wakodahatchee FL
more 'tude

I looked at this next one a long time while photographing, and then again at the photo at home. It's a Cattle Egret, too, just in a slightly different state of plumage.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Cattle Egret, Wakodahatchee FL

Here's an odd one out for the big white birds. This is a Little Blue Heron--they're white in their immature plumage:

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; LIttle Blue Heron, Loxahatchee NWR
odd one out

I'll finish this up with a White Ibis in nice light:

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Whte Ibis, Wakodahatchee FL
damn fine lookin' bird

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Jamaica Bay, July 4th Weekend

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Song Sparrow, Jamaica Bay NWR
this means you!

At the beginning of July, Elena and I went out to Jamaica Bay with some friends. Although it's still a little early for shorebirds, some interesting birds had been seen there and we wanted to get the lay of the land.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Black Skimmer, Jamaica Bay NWR
Skimmer skimming

We arrived just about at low tide. On the West Pond side, things were a little slow. There were a number of egrets, both Great and Snowy, and some Boat-Tailed Grackles were out on the mud flats acting like shorebirds. A few Gulls and Common Terns. Then as the tide began to turn, I saw three black-and-white birds with red bills, low over the breach in the pond.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Black Skimmer, Jamaica Bay NWR
against the tide

They were Black Skimmers, doing what they do best. They were so graceful as they skimmed the surface, flying against the tide. They looked like they were in slow motion, though they were obviously flying quite fast. It was so mesmerizing that I didn't manage to get a shot with them all in the frame. Thrilling to see!

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Osprey Nest, Jamaica Bay NWR
Osprey suburb

Elsewhere at Jamaica Bay, nesting is in full swing. The Osprey platform at the West Pond has two young birds on it, and there's another Osprey nest north of the North Garden

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Osprey, Jamaica Bay NWR
lookout

There were a lot of Yellow Warblers around, and many singing House Wrens. Over at the East Pond, I counted fifty-eight adult Mute Swans. I understand that some have seen well over a hundred, plus cygnets.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Mute Swan, East Pond, Jamaica Bay NWR
you, I don't trust

We didn't see any cygnets, but this adult cruised back and forth in front of us, clearly very suspicious, so I assume he had a nest nearby.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; American Oystercatchers, East Pond, Jamaica Bay NWR
loafing Oystercatchers

On the far side were a large collection of Oystercatchers--I counted 25--and many Glossy Ibises. There were a number of Forster's Terns and Least Terns, hunting by hovering over then water and then plunging in with an impressive bang.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Snowy Egret, Big John's Pond
the stare of the Egret

There were only a few birds around Big John's Pond--it was only a couple of hours after low tide--but we had nice close looks from the blind at a Snowy Egret and several Glossy Ibises.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Glossy Ibises, Big John's Pond, Jamaica Bay NWR
Ibises at work

Alose a bunch of Black-Crowned Night Herons were hanging out, including this juvenile, who I guess is so young he's still kind of gray-downy instead of teh brown-streaky appearance I'm used to with young BCNHs.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Juvenile Black-Crowned Night Heron, Big John's Pond
young and lovely

There were fewer shorebirds than I expected, but of course we didn't try to go around the muddy areas at the north and south ends of the East Pond, not having knee-boots. We didn't see any of the reported rarities--no White-Faced Ibis, Royal Tern, Gull-Billed Tern, or Cattle Egret, but we had a great time.

Monday, February 29, 2016

Florida, part 2: more birds

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Sanderling, Ft. Lauderdale

Thanks to the wonders of technology, we got continually notified as our flight home was delayed again and again, so we were able to travel more around the Ft. Lauderdale area. We spent a little time on a narrow strip of beach near a small park (Hugh Taylor Birch State Park), where Adam had frequently gone when he lived nearby. There were Sanderlings dashing in and out of the crashing waves, and Brown Pelicans cruising stately on the high wind.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Sanderling, Ft. Lauderdale

The Sanderlings were another life bird for me--like the Blue-Winged Teal, I'm sure I've seen them before, but they weren't on my list. Cute little guys.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Belted Kingfisher, Green Cay

Anyway, I also got great looks at a lot of birds I had seen before, so I'm going to share a few pictures. This Belted Kingfisher was hovering pretty high over Green Cay. I guess she was grabbing insects from the air? This is one of my better bird-in-flight photos.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Green Heron, Green Cay

Most of the familiar birds we saw were at Green Cay. This Green Heron hinted along a marsh edge only twenty feet or so from the boardwalk.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Sora, Green Cay

Soras are usually hard to spot (except the one who was stuck in the Loch in Central Park last Fall). This one was pretty confiding.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Snowy Egret, Green Cay

Snowy Egrets are usually shyer than this, too. I wonder what about Green Cay made these birds all so confiding?

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Painted Hunting, Green Cay

My first Painted Bunting was the famous Prespect Park (Brooklyn) bird earlier in the winter. In south Florida, they're feeder birds.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Painted Bunting, Green Cay

There's a feeder off the path between the parking lot and the nature center, which the Buntings liked. I saw my first female painted bunting there. While not as gaudy as the males, they are quite pretty birds. I think they are the only all-green birds in the U.S.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Boat-Tailed Grackle, My Big Fat Greek Restaurant

This very friendly Boat-Tailed Grackle hung around the Greek restaurant we stopped at the first day, begging food and singing. The waiter told us the bird would steal sugar packets from the tables.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Boat-Tailed Grackle, Green Cay

There were Boat-Tailed Grackles all over Green Cay. Here's a nice close shot of a female.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Palm Warbler, Green Cay

We saw various warblers, as well. Besides this Palm Warbler (one of several), Yellow-Rumped Warblers were thick in the reeds. There were a few Black-and_White Warblers as well, and along the path from the parking lot I spotted a Prairie Warbler.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Nashville Warbler, Green Cay

And in the last minutes of our second trip to Green Cay, we spotted this Nashville Warbler near the parking lot, a local rarity that had been frequently sighted there this winter.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Red-Shouldered Hawk, Green Cay

This Red-Shouldered Hawk was one of two hawk species we spotted in Florida (the other were a juvenile and an adult Marsh Harrier). This Red-Shouldered is quite pale, which apparently is a common color morph in south Florida.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Pied-Billed Grebe, Green Cay

Here's a nice close-up of a Pied-Billed Grebe to round things out. I'll have one more Florida post in a couple of days.

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Waiting for the shorebirds

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Blue Heron, Muscota Marsh
Great Blue Hunter

It's the end of July and I'm waiting for the shorebirds to show up. As far as I know, nobody's been seeing much in Manhattan--no sandpipers at all, for one thing. I've read that Jamaica Bay is quite uncharacteristically slow, too--maybe the migrating shorebirds are avoiding the whole area.

I was up at Inwood Hill Park the other weekend, and although there were no sandpipers or plovers, there were a few birds of the heron family, including my first Great Blue Heron of the year in Manhattan--two of them actually, hunting quite successfully in the coves.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Snowy Egret, Muscota Marsh
Snowy Egret

There were also at least one Snowy Egret, and a Great Egret. All nice to see, but I'm still waiting for my peeps.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Great Egret, Spuyten Duyvil Creek
Great Egret, workin' hard

Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Big weekend

I started my weekend by taking Friday off from work. There had been a lot of rarities reported in Central Park on Thursday--Blue Grosbeak, Red-Headed Woodpecker, both kinds of Cuckoo--but I was responsible adult and went to work.

They were all gone Friday, but I quietly got a total of 49 species anyway. A lot of migrating warblers were in.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Black-Throated Blue Warbler
I'm on my way

And a lot of resident birds were going about their business--establishing territory

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Carolina Wren singing
I am wren, hear me roar

bathing

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Orchard Oriole bathing with a Yellow-Rumped Warbler
Orchard Oriole and a Yellow-Rumped Warbler at the bird spa

and foraging.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Robin and apple
yum!

It was a splendid day. I had 46 species by noon, and then went off to look for the Mourning Warbler seen between Balcony Bridge and Triplets Bridge. I found it--along with dozens of other people--and had some good views, but I spent the rest of the day trying to get a good photo of it. It was too wily for me, though.

Saturday was the Global Big Day, organized by the Cornell Ornithology Lab as a conservation-awareness and fundraising initiative. The idea was to get a lot of people out in the field and see how many species they could see. The Lab hoped to record 4500 of the 10000+ species--they got almost 6000.

But it was a bit slow in New York. I had only twenty species in the Ramble, so I went up to Inwood Hill Park. The tide was rushing in when I arrived, but I was lucky enough to see the previously-reported Greater Yellowlegs

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Greater Yellowlegs, Spuyten Duyvil Creek
skinny legs and all

which was a life New York City bird for me, and as a bonus there were a pair of Snowy Egrets--

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Snowy Egrets, Spuyten Duyvil Creek
Egrets, I've had a few

--first of the year for me, and a very good bird for Inwood Hill.

Since I was there, I decide to look for the Wild Turkey that had been reported recently, and on the way up the hill I met Nadir Sourigi, a really fine birder who leads walks for Audubon and so on, and we went off to look for her and for Cuckoos. No luck on either, but I highly recommend the experience of birding with someone who's massively better than you. Great fun, as well as instructive and informative.

Sunday was a little brisker in Central Park, and a lovely day for birding as well.

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Northern Parula
Northern Parula

Ed Gaillard: birds &emdash; Blue-Headed Vireo
Blue-Headed Vireo

I'll post more soon.