2025—Stalker

Great Blue Herons are patient stalkers. Their movements are slow and purposeful as they wade through shallow water, watching and waiting. If they spot prey, they will suddenly lunge, their long neck stretching to its maximum. They slice through the water with their sharp beaks open and gulp! whatever was swimming by is now in the Great Blue Heron’s gullet.

2025—Stork on the Way

Wood Storks have taken over the trees along the first part of the boardwalk at Wakodahatchee Wetlands as nesting sites. They are so close to the boardwalk that I often couldn’t focus on them. My minimum focusing distance is just over thirteen feet. They did spend quite a bit of time flying to feed and the find nesting materials so when they were flying to and from their nesting site is when I was able to photograph them and get the entire Wood Stork in the frame.

2025—Two Chicks

There were lots of chicks in nests at Wakodahatchee Wetlands a couple of weeks ago. Because they hatch at different times, the growth of chicks differs. In this Great Blue Heron’s nest for example, while the parent preens, the two chicks check out their new world that surrounds them. The larger of the two is a bit closer to the parent’s beak so when it’s feeding time, that chick makes sure it gets first dibs.

2025—Lady Anna

In 1829, the Anna’s Hummingbird was named to honor French courtier Anne d’Essling, the Duchess of Rivoli, who was married to amateur ornithologist François Victor Massena, the 3rd Duke of Rivoli after whom the Rivoli’s Hummingbird, once called the Magnificent Hummingbird, is named. This is a female Anna’s Hummingbird who was out and about in my garden between skirmishes by the three rival male Anna’s. I hadn”t seen a female at the feeders for a while so it was nice to see her. I’m hoping she’s on a nest nearby. Time will tell. I wish she’d posed for me in front of a nice green background like a couple of the feeders have but alas, she stopped and looked at me in front of the fence, painted the requisite “sanderling” color which is not the color of a Sanderling at all.

2025—Wing Stretch

Anhingas spend much of their time stretching their wings out to dry. They don’t have water repellant feathers so when they’re out of the water, that’s how they dry them off, reminiscent of Cormorants that similarly spread their wings to dry. This is a female Anhinga, the skin surrounding its red eye a greenish color during breeding season. The Anhingas were quite prevalent in Wakodahatchee Wetlands, lots of pairs with nests and lots spreading their wings to dry.

2025—Snake Bird

This haughty-looking Anhinga, also sometimes known as a Snakebird, seemed to be posing, wings outstretched, last week at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Florida, but posing with an attitude based on this over-the-shoulder glance. I was close enough that only his snake-like neck, his head with the skin around his eye sporting the brilliant blue-green of a male in breeding plumage, and just a portion of the top of his left wing were showing. These large slender water birds are related to Cormorants and, like Cormorants, they stand with wings outstretched to dry their wings. Anhingas were nesting in large numbers in trees in the wetlands along with Wood Storks and Great Blue Herons. I saw one small yellow chick’s head peeking from beneath its mother’s breast feathers one morning but saw no others during the week. Their display with black and white dotted wings outstretched is eye-catching but I love the closeup of just his head and neck, emphasizing why he got his common name, and of course the gorgeous colors surrounding his eye.

2025—The Green Hunter

Green Herons, like all herons, are great hunters. They stand motionless for long periods as they watch the water beneath their perches. At the perfect moment, they plunge into the water, more often than not emerging with the prey they saw and gulp it down. There were quite a few Green Herons at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Florida, almost all, like this one, perched with their attention focused on the murky waters below.

2025—Not So Gorgeous

Let’s be frank. Wood Storks are just plain ugly. They are large, ungainly, and bald. But they’re not just bald. Their heads and necks are covered with lumpy scale-like grayish skin with no feathers. This preening Wood Stork looks very Pterodactyl-like, even more so than the also prehistoric appearing Brown Pelican. Despite their unappealing looks, Wood Storks are considered a “keystone species,” meaning they are critical to the overall successful functioning of ecosystems in Florida, according to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission. And they are listed as threatened on both the Florida and Federal Endangered Species lists. The Wood Storks are right at home at Wakodahatchee Wetlands. The wetlands serve as a giant rookery and most of the clusters of trees that sprout from small islands in the middle of the marshes are dotted with the scores of pairs of Wood Storks that have built nests in each tree.

2025—Matching Colors

Great Egrets in full breeding plumage sport long plumes called aigrettes that create lacy umbrellas when they perform their courtship rituals. Their yellow beaks become brighter yellow and the top mandible turns almost black. But most amazing is that their lores, the area between their eyes, turns from a dull yellow to a bright neon lime green. As I watched this Great Egret flying over the Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Florida last week, aigrettes streaming out behind, I noticed that the yellow of the beak and the green of the lores matched perfectly with the background foliage behind him. You gotta love nature.

2025—What a Pair

Burrowing Owls are so captivating that they’ll keep a smile on your face the entire time you’re watching them but when two of them are together, oh my! Which one do you focus on?? This pair kept their eyes on the surrounding fields, whatever was in the sky above them, and, us. My Sibley Birds App has kept me apprised of relevant information about the birds we photographed in Florida, including the Burrowing Owls. In fact, while Burrowing owls tend to occupy dens and burrows abandoned by other critters, in Florida, they often dig their own burrows. The soil is very sandy and the owl on the left spent some time remodeling the burrow, sending waves of sand into the air behind him and onto his mate who sat unmoving as the sand cascaded over and around.

2025—Courting Beak

My Sibley Birds app notes that the beaks of Tricolored Herons turn blue when they’re in breeding plumage but it also notes that when the beak is this electric blue, it indicates courtship color in an adult. That difference is not described in detail but my guess is that the electric blue means that this particular Tricolored Heron is still working on attracting a mate and so its beak color is enhanced. I did notice that while some of the Tricolored Herons at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Florida had blue beaks, only a few sported such an intense blue.

2025—Back to the Burrow

As we were leaving Wednesday afternoon, one of the Burrowing Owls at Brian Piccolo Park flew to the burrow across the walking path. When we returned yesterday afternoon, we were surprised to find two Burrowing Owls in one burrow and the other burrow appeared to be vacant. At one point, one of the owls emerged from the burrow and climbed to the edge. They have such expressive faces and the surrounding park grasses provided a soft green background. Their eyes changed constantly from wide open like in this image to half closed to sleeping and all of the appealing owl looks in between. We ended our trip on a high note, spending a couple of hours with the Burrowing Owls at Brian Piccolo Park.

2025—Wing Stretch

On Wednesday afternoon, instead of returning to Wakodahatchee Wetlands, we decided on a change of pace and drove an hour south to Brian Piccolo Park where a number of Burrowing Owl burrows are cordoned off to protect the owls but the burrows are visible in the midst of soccer fields and other park amenities. The park’s popularity for walking and soccer practices, seemed not to bother the Burrowing Owls. Their burrows were spread out throughout the park, in the midst of soccer fields and on either side of the main pathways. We watched a couple of the burrows for a couple of hours yesterday afternoon and the owls were not bothered with our presence nor with the nearby soccer practices going on but they were concerned about the Turkey Vultures soaring overhead. Two different owls poked their heads out of their burrows several times during our two hour visit there. Both emerged from their burrows and surveyed the area for quite a while, completely exposed. This owl did a leisurely wing stretch after emerging from its burrow. It then proceeded to watch the surrounding area before eventually returning to its burrow. Just before we left for the afternoon, it suddenly leapt forward and flew in a low trajectory across the walking path and to the burrow of its neighbor. The neighbor didn’t emerge and we had to leave so we didn’t see what transpired after that.

2025—Wakodahatchee

And another birding adventure started off with a spectacular first day yesterday at Wakodahatchee Wetlands, a park in Delray Beach, Florida created from unused utility land and transformed into a recreation wetlands that is part of the Great Florida Birding Trail. The light was with us with overcast skies most of the day, avoiding the harsh shadows that are especially problematic in an environment that is filled with sticks and leaves and busy backgrounds. Over 150 species of birds have been seen in the wetlands and on our first day, I photographed 15 different species which is about 10% of the species that live in or visit Wakodahatchee. We were excited to find a pair of normally elusive Gray-headed Swamphens, also sometimes called a Purple Swamphens, along the area beneath the boardwalk with mud and lots of aquatic plants like pickerel weed that the Swamphens love to pluck out of the water and munch. This image shows the Swamphen as it foraged through the weeds searching for the perfect stem to pluck and consume. As one of them approached the boardwalk to walk under it, I managed to get a few close up images before I exceeded the minimum focusing distance of my lens. The bird’s impossibly large toes which allow it to walk across the plants on the surface of the water are visible.

2025—Barred Owl

The Barred Owl that we photographed in Sax-Zim Bog last month has a very different look than the Great Gray Owl. Not only is it smaller with different coloring in its feathers, the eyes are very different. Instead of a yellow iris with a dark pupil that the Great Gray Owl has, the Barred Owl has distinctive large dark eyes. The Barred Owl’s dark eyes give it a softer, less intense look than that of the larger Great Gray.

2025—A Wondrous Bird

Oh, a wondrous bird is the pelican,
His bill can hold more than his belican,
He can take in his beak,
Food enough for a week,
But I’m damned if I see how the helican.
Dixon Lanier Merritt1910

Brown Pelicans fascinate me, and, they have always struck me as looking very prehistoric. I recently stumbled across a “fun” fact sheet by California Audubon that included references to the above limerick which I first heard years ago. But it also pointed out that Brown Pelicans have a prehistoric look because their basic features have remained practically unchanged in the past 30 to 40 million years. That led me to a BBC reference to an article from fifteen years ago in the Journal of Ornithology that described how researchers, examining the fossilized remains of a Pelican, concluded at that time that the ancient pelican was almost identical to the modern species.  In fact, their huge beaks have survived almost unchanged. Could Dixon Merritt’s poem unwittingly explain this phenomenon? That their huge beaks, which contort to accommodate whatever the Pelican catches, has always provided a practical and effective way to store and eat food so there has never been a reason to evolve further thus assuring their survival. Hmmm. Maybe the last line of the limerick, in reference to the Pelcian’s flexible beak, should read “And I’ll be damned, I can see how the helican.”

2025—Happy Valentine’s Day

Happy Valentine’s Day! This male Anna’s Hummingbird’s gorget glowed a glorious pink yesterday afternoon when the sun peeked through the clouds briefly, and the light struck his gorget just right so that it glowed solid pink, unlike the day before—perfect for Valentine’s Day. Despite the heavy rains and high winds here yesterday, the Anna’s Hummingbirds remained feisty and combative around the backyard feeders. I went out for only a few minutes, blissfully sheltered by the patio roof and the thick pillars that hold it up. This belligerent male Anna’s would not let any of the others close to his feeders even as wind gusts caused those same feeders to swing in an arc so steep that some of the nectar spilled out. As the gusts slowed to a tolerable breeze, he hovered near the feeder and his gaze at me seemed more confrontational than welcoming even though I had just refilled the feeders only moments before.

2025—Hummingbird Update

It’s been a while since I’ve posted any Hummingbird updates. The male Anna’s Hummingbirds in my yard are fully feathered now and their gorgets are gorgeous. It was overcast and the light was diffused so the way the light was hitting the feathers affected the colors of the iridescence. Instead of all pink, the gorget had tones of copper, green, and gold. This guy was on alert and keeping track of the other male Anna’s that were in the vicinity. He didn’t perch for long.

2025—Blastoff!

Every time I witness a blastoff of Snow Geese, I am awestruck. Thousands of geese rise in unison and take to the air in a swirling mass of wings. It is a noisy spectacle as well because as they ascend, the thunder of their wingbeats almost drowns out the nasal honking that announces the event. Snow Geese blastoffs usually occur early morning or approaching sunset when thousands of geese are triggered into taking off at once. Sometimes the blast off announces time to return to the fields to feed, sometimes it spreads the alert of a predator patrolling in the area, sometimes it signals time to return to the night’s roosting spot. The Snow Geese blastoffs at Gray Lodge in January were not as big as those I’ve seen at Bosque del Apache in New Mexico but they were impressive just the same.