Who doesn't love wading in the salty water, watching the waves roll in . . . I'm pretty sure this was an immature reddish egret .
An osprey discovered the perch I've also seen a bald eagle atop in weeks past . . . on the Intracoastal side of Matanzas Inlet . . .
. . . It was a dark and stormy morning . . .
Not many seashell finds, but this scallop was the most strongly patterned one I've found on this particular beach.
Showing posts with label osprey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label osprey. Show all posts
August 03, 2015
April 13, 2014
Birding Bonanza
The past few days I've been seeing more "new" birds at the feeders, or under them…! Friday I dropped hubby at the park and went here and there in the general area of Flagler and Ormond Beaches, my first real birding outing since moving to NE Florida, away from the Atlantic shoreline. Not far away, but…
First, let's see what I've found close to home…starting with the most exciting visitor(s)!
Imagine my shock and excitement to see an indigo bunting, a lifer!!
It puttered around the ground below the feeders for quite awhile…I saw the lone bunting two days in a row, then nothing for a few days, and then...
A trio of indigo buntings! After this sighting, a few days ago, there's been nothing since, but they are a summer resident of Florida…
At least one No. mockingbird has become brave enough to check out the feeders…this is a first…I think he really wants suet but seems awkward at the suet feeder...
I took photos of this small dove because it was clearly so much smaller than the mourning dove…turns out it's the common ground-dove, a lifer! It isn't so common in the US actually (see your bird guide)...
Here's a comparison shot of a mourning dove (top) and the ground-dove (bottom)…
I spent some time outside hoping I could catch a brave bird or two w/o the glass window between us…and got two iffy shots of what turns out to be the palm warbler…the birds and squirrels love the bottle brush flowers (boo-boo)! The palm warbler only winters in FL so I'm no doubt only getting a fleeting look at them…they summer much further north in Canada...
I was lucky to catch a brown thrasher at a feeder a few days ago! This is my 2nd sighting of them...
A Carolina wren was bold enough to climb up the screening on our back porch, perching briefly on the light under the awning...
A couple pale Amer. goldfinches visited recently…they've been pretty scarce this year...
Here's a squirrel caught in the act of ravaging my lovely bottle brush tree…they like to snap the entire blossom off; there's dozens on the ground, grrrr!
So, Friday about 8:00 am I began my birding outing…this is a view of the Atlantic Intracoastal Waterway from Gamble Rogers State Park…as lovely as this is….
The only bird I saw was this No. cardinal….humph!
So, I moved on south to No. Peninsula Salt Marsh...
Since I wasn't supposed to walk out towards the marsh, I had to take distant photos, starting with this one of a killdeer...
…And an immature bald eagle…
…And a great blue heron…
….A lesser yellowlegs…(or greater? both winter here)…
…Hmm, a black-bellied plover? Feel free to correct me...
After the salt marsh, I headed back north a bit…while passing the N Peninsula, on the W side of A1A, I spotted a Florida scrub jay (!!!) way up on the power line! A lifer! They are known to inhabit that area so I will have to make an effort to find one closer up...
I proceeded to a really nice boardwalk that leads over the Intracoastal marshes and oyster beds towards the open waterway…
And found this tri-colored heron (1st for 2014) fishing….
…and another one…
…As well as this snowy egret, that kept flapping its wings but didn't take off...
Walking back towards the parking lot, I scared a pileated woodpecker from a dead tree by the boardwalk…scared myself too! Had to take a long-distance shot once it landed again…
While walking on a dirt path under the hammock, I looked up through the foliage in time to see an osprey flying over, with a fish in its talons…I grumbled about missing that shot…a bit later I looked up as I walked under a dead tree...
Directly above me, 30 feet max., I discovered the same osprey having its brunch...
Ah yea, sushi! Mmmm….
…For some reason, the fish needed to be given the stink eye…
The light was too harsh to get a great shot but it was a pretty cool experience…except for when a mature gentleman came along walking his dog and I pointed the osprey out to him…and he replied, "But isn't that a bald eagle?" Uh….no. It's not the first time someone tried to tell me that maybe an osprey was an eagle. Wishful thinking!
I then moved on to a town park with a nice foot path, partly along the west side of the Intracoastal...
I took a short walk to see what was about…a great egret was perched on a bare tree on the opposite side….
On my way back, an osprey flew over….
And joined the egret, giving it a visual lesson about hierarchy...
Despite the poor or lack of photos, it has been a pretty nice birding week!
Labels:
American goldfinch,
brown thrasher,
Carolina wren,
common ground-dove,
great blue heron,
great egret,
indigo bunting,
killdeer,
lesser yellowlegs,
osprey,
palm warbler,
pileated woodpecker,
tri-colored heron
January 07, 2013
G is for Gallinule, Gator, Girl, Gulls, Gimpie, Gannet
Ok, I'm a little pink-faced as I admit I forgot to post some stuff from December...so here I am back-tracking to early December, when our daughter was visiting and the three of us had headed down to the Ft. Lauderdale area. We stayed a couple days with my brother-in-law, whom we had lived with the first 6 months upon our arrival in Florida.
While there, the 3 of us and BIL's girlfriend Karen went to the Everglades Holiday Park, to take dtr. on an air boat ride. We didn't realize we were walking onto the set of a reality show! This is where "Gator Boys" is filmed. No TV cameras that day...but we had an interesting, fun visit...despite the lack of any real time spent speeding fast in the boat....
During the air boat ride, we spotted some purple gallinules! A lifer bird for me, very exciting as the gallinule is so colorful and not seen in very many states outside of Florida....this was my 2nd to last lifer sighted in 2012. Unfortunately I couldn't get any clear pics of one, ARG!
Er....we also spotted a couple alligators, which was expected...
Back on land, we checked out the Gator Boys' gator show, then I shelled out some cash so dtr. could hold a baby gator....awww, isn't it cute?
Not so cute that we minded snacking on one of its cousins...Karen bought us all a plate of gator bites, frog legs, and some unidentified fish, all breaded and deep fried...duh...
I'd already tried gator some time ago, but frog legs? If dtr. can do it, so can I....
they taste like mild fish...(not chicken!)
While snacking, we had a peacock hanging around, looking for hand-outs....don't bother rubbing your eyes, it IS a peacock!
In fact, we had a line at the table waiting for dropped crumbs...that's a boat-tailed grackle behind the peacock....
Mr. P went as far as posing pretty to try to encourage us to toss him some goodies...
* * * * *
Ok, back at home.....
Update: I had this labeled as an American Pipit and a lifer...my first reaction had been that it was a female red-winged blackbird, but the vivid white eyebrow threw me off because the female blackbirds I'd seen while living in S Dakota had less prominent, beige eyebrows. Fellow bird nerd Laurence let me know (thank you!) he believes it's a blackbird...so I went back over my two field guides and, looking at the beak, I would have to concur this is the female red-winged blackbird....darn it. LOL. Oh well, that just means that my last lifer sighting for 2012 is the blurry Northern gannet!
Back to 2013.....barely....
Rube and I hit the beach a few days ago, soon as the up and down weather hit an "up"....
We saw the usual shore birds, like this sanderling amid some frothy sea foam...
Ok everyone, pop quiz.....what IS this?! Choices: Red Knot (winter plumage), which I believe it is; Western sandpiper, which appears to have black not greenish legs; or least sandpiper, tho I'm pretty sure it's not that due to the size and darker winter plumage. The other similar birds either don't come to Florida or don't have greenish legs in winter or...I'm labeling it a red knot. A lifer!
I just don't get it...how can the juvenile ring-billed gull be larger than the adult?! Can anyone explain this?! Or is there another immature gull that looks like the imm. RBG? ARG!!
This sweet little ruddy turnstone was resting on the orange shell chips that were scattered on the beach...
But it wasn't alone...this one-legged sanderling was sticking close by. Aww, what are friends for?!
(And yes, I'm sure it was one-legged, I saw it hop.)
I shot this very distant flyer out over the ocean, thinking it may be a wintering white pelican...but it's a Northern gannet!! Another lifer!
So, there's a long boardwalk from the parking lot to the beach in this one spot...along the boardwalk there's a sign with info about the burrowing gopher tortoise that lives in the dunes there, which is clearly being protected from beachgoers. There was an older couple reading the sign when we came back over the walk towards the parking...I mumbled to myself, yea right, you and I will never see one tho.....crossing the parking lot, we saw 3 kids huddled together looking at something....and there was this tortoise trudging along, hell-bent on reaching the safety of the dunes. A turtle lifer!
Heading back south along A1A, we stopped in the Marineland area (a town with a dolphin rehab center)...to check out a holding pond, where some big groupers were swimming around...at the far end was this lone little blue heron....
Outnumbered by a flock of brown pelicans....
On the lawn nearby, killdeer were making their eerie call...
** My bird species count for 2012 is a measly 83, so I'm hoping to see at least 100 in 2013.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)