1-2-3 Birds and Berries – #10

 

The birds continue to enjoy the bounty of native berries, or at least posing nicely for me around them.

 

Northern Mockingbird

 

Common Grackle

 

Field Sparrow

 

Pine Warbler

 

American Robin

 

Yellow-rumped Warbler

 

Carolina Chickadee

 

 

Handsome Red Fox

First, a WP issue. Again. I want to mention that I have been submitting comments at many of your blogs for past weeks/month, but they are not showing up.  Even hitting the ‘like’ button has to be done numerous times to make it work, but I usually succeed with that issue. But if I was a frequent commenter on yours and you’ve noticed I haven’t been lately, now you know why. Sorry! I still keep trying, but it’s very frustrating to not see it load, and so where did it go? I’ve learned some bloggers do not know they have an administration comments section to check or it’s not checked often. Could my comments be in your spam or pending comments admin folder awaiting your review?

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Okay, on with this beauty!

We continue to have fox sightings on our property as they make their way back and forth into the marsh behind us.

I was already tucked away shooting birds and saw this one coming, unaware of me.  When I started clicking, it stopped to look for me, totally in the wrong direction at first.

 

Red Fox

 

Scanning, it took the fox a bit to zone in on me, and that’s when I snapped the eye contact.

 

Someone’s sporting a healthy winter coat to stay warm

 

Fingers crossed I get the chance to see little ones in the Spring.  Photographing them would be a bonus!

 

Sitting in the Rain

These two birds are definitely not singing in the rain, but are definitely getting wet perched just a few trees apart from each other a couple days ago.

 

Belted Kingfisher showing he doesn’t mind the rain

 

Great Blue Heron begs to differ, preferring to use the unseen upper tree canopy for its umbrella

 

Me?  I was sitting in my car keeping dry while shooting out my window. 😏

 

A Cardinal Reflection

 

Oopsie!  I was so tickled with this three-photo series from my visit to Blackwater NWR last week, then filed them in the wrong folder for posting.  Didn’t realize until after my previous “Part 2” post went live.

No worries, I am happy to give this Northern Cardinal it’s own special share.  Northern Cardinals are one of my favorite birds, and I’m not sure if I’ve ever gotten any decent water reflections with one.  Until last week!

 

 

 

 

 

A Grand Day At Blackwater NWR – Part 2

 

Continuing with my visit to Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge, here’s the rest of the whole shebang!  Can you pick a favorite?  Whew, I cannot!

 

Song Sparrow

 

Mourning Dove

 

Canada Geese

 

Great Blue Heron

 

Brown-headed Nuthatch

 

American Goldfinch

 

American Black Ducks

 

American Crow

 

American Coot

 

Mallards

 

Downy Woodpecker

 

Tundra Swans

 

Tundra Swan

 

Great Blue Heron

 

Northern Harrier

 

Red-tailed Hawk

 

Ring-necked Ducks

 

Northern Pintails

 

Northern Pintails

 

Northern Pintails

 

Dunlins

 

Eagle Nests

 

Great Egret

 

Great Egret

 

Great Egret

 

Canada Geese

 

Tundra Swans

 

Great Blue Heron napping

 

I’m guessing the Great Blue Heron fell asleep from too many photos…  😉

 

 

A Grand Day At Blackwater NWR – Part 1

 

A few days ago, I visited Blackwater National Wildlife Refuge in Cambridge, Maryland.

It’d been almost three years since my last visit. I’m luckily now living much closer at only an hour away and have been itching to go for the past couple months.

I’m still processing photos but wanted to get this show started with a three-bird species sneak-peek.

First up, the two photos of this first bird are not great quality, but they’re still fantastic to me for good reason. This hawk is considered rare for our region, plus is a lifer.  Woot! 😊

 

Rough-legged Hawk (dark-morph) – lifer!
Lives and breeds under continuous sunlight in the Arctic tundra
Migrates to southern Canada and the U.S. (primarily West/mid-West) for the winter

 

Rough-legged Hawk (dark-morphed)

 

Another sighting considered rare for our region, the American White Pelican. That being said, there is a small flock that arrives and winters at the refuge every winter. They stay well-hidden and are usually difficult to find/see because of the vast marsh unreachable by the public.

I luckily found the flock way out in the distance from Maple Dam Road. Again, not so great photo heavily cropped, BUT there they are!  I counted 36.

 

American White Pelicans (36+ count)

 

I know, my photo quality is slipping here. Let me make up for them with these next two.  😉

 

Bald Eagle

 

Bald Eagle

 

Now that was a perfect photo op that couldn’t have been any better!

More to come from this refuge……

 

 

Comparing Bird Couples – #1

 

It’s intriguing that with some bird species, you cannot tell the difference so easily, or if at all, between the male and female.  Whereas, others have subtle, distinct or bold differences between the gender.

This new bird series will showcase photos of both a male and female to compare their species’ differences.  Sometimes it amazes to see the female looking nothing like her mate!

Let’s start with the Northern Cardinal, a favorite species for many, that has obvious big differences.

 

Northern Cardinal – male

 

Northern Cardinal – female

 

Yet, with the Eastern Bluebird, comparing the female to her mate, she does have the same coloring but it’s much lighter/paler.

 

Eastern Bluebirds – male at top, female at bottom

 

The females may not always be the brightest or most colorful, but they do have their own distinct beauty in their color patterns as we’ll discover along the way.  😊

 

 

 

1-2-3 Birds and Berries – #9

 

It’s been a berry-good fall/winter to date as the birds will attest!

 

Eastern Bluebird (male)

 

Northern Mockingbird

 

Purple Finch (female)

 

Eastern Towhee (male)

 

American Robin

 

Ruby-crowned Kinglet

 

American Goldfinch (females or immatures)

 

Cedar Waxwing

 

Carolina Chickadee

 

Yellow-rumped Warbler

 

White-throated Sparrow

 

 

Flying Into the New Year

 

 

As we head into 2024,

 

 

remember to embrace your inner swan and let your beauty shine!

 

 

Wishing you beautiful moments, treasured memories, and all the blessings a heart can know.

Happy New Year!

 

 

Raptors in Trees

 

Raptors perched in trees and on snags.  Always a treat!

 

Bald Eagle (adult)

 

Bald Eagle (juvenile)

 

Red-shouldered Hawk

 

Cooper’s Hawk (juvenile)

 

Cooper’s Hawk close-up (juvenile)

 

Cooper’s Hawk (adult)

 

Bald Eagle