Showing posts with label Northern Cardinal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Cardinal. Show all posts

Thursday, November 4, 2021

Crops & Clips: Flashback to November , 2018

As I do each month, I enjoyed looking back over my archived photos, taken three years previously, to remember how things were then and maybe get some idea of what to expect this year. I processed 494 photos in November, 2018. As usual, I searched for images which reflected favorite memes: critters of all kinds (especially birds), skies and clouds, reflections, flowers and fences, as well as scenes which speak for themselves. We spent the entire year at home in south Florida. 

On November 1, our walk in the Wounded Wetlands rewarded us with an Eastern Phoebe...

...an acrobatic female Black-and-White Warbler:


The next morning, several long-legged waders foraged in a slough created by off-road vehicles next to the wet prairie. Heavy rains had caused the lake to spill over, trapping fish in the surrounding area. They included a Little Blue and Tricolored Heron as well as a Great Egret:

A Snowy Egret and Wood Stork were out of the frame:

This is a nice size comparison between the egret and the Tricolored Heron:

The egret flew up to balance on some flimsy branches:

The heron rookery was about to be demolished. It harbored a secretive Black-crowned Night-Heron...

...and a drab Yellow-crowned Night-Heron:

Before the end of the first week I saw a Yellow-throated Warbler...


...a female Blue Grosbeak in winter plumage...

...a male Northern Cardinal who had just completed molting into fresh plumage...

...a devoted pair of Black Vultures which had nested nearby for several years...

...a White-eyed Vireo...

...and Florida's State Butterfly, a Zebra heliconian on Firebush (Hamelia patens):

Although I should have been satisfied with such an auspicious start, other sightings that month included a Pileated Woodpecker...

...a female Red-bellied Woodpecker...

...Northern Mockingbird...

...female Painted Bunting...

...Gulf Fritillary on Lantana...

...Prairie Warbler...

...Blue-headed Vireo...

...White Ibises...

...immature Red-shouldered Hawk...

...and a male Scarlet Skimmer (Crocothemis servilia):

A male Bobcat strolled nonchalantly across the gravel track:

On November 24 the full Beaver Moon set over the lake:

The next morning it was quite high as the fog lifted:

There were buttermilk skies...

...brilliant reflections...

and fiery sunrises:

However, all was not good. The heron rookery was destroyed. This was the view of the rookery on November 20:

Heavy machinery was poised on a floating platform:

Two days later, hurricane debris had been removed and most of the shoreline vegetation which had hosted the heron nests had been clear-cut: 

On November 28, a lone night-heron rested on a broken branch near the missing tree which had contained one of eight nests that produced numerous young birds earlier that year:

This photo, taken at a pasture next to Chapel Trail Nature Preserve, is a somber reminder that now, three years later, the Longhorn cattle and Cattle Egrets are gone and the grassland is being paved over for a parking lot to store boats and RVs:

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Linking to:


Fences Around the World

Nature Thursday

Skywatch Friday

Weekend Reflections

Saturday's Critters

BirdD'Pot

Camera Critters

All Seasons

Wordless Wednesday (on Tuesday)

Natasha Musing

Our World Tuesday

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Please visit the links to all these posts to see some excellent photos on display
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Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Avian Red-eye special

Scores of Florida Trema trees* in our local Wounded Wetlands were destroyed by Hurricane Irma back in October, 2017. Nearly all the taller ones were either felled or stripped of their leaves. Most went on to die within a year. Those remaining were mostly saplings which flowered but did not bear the fruit which is so attractive to wildlife. Tremas normally produce abundant berries just in time for autumn migration. This year, some of them have matured and been very productive.

Southbound Red-eyed Vireos usually arrive ahead of most of the other songbirds, often by mid-August and become quite common by early September. On the first day of September, a half hour after sunrise, a flock of five were eating the Trema berries: 







Three days later, just after sunrise, lighting conditions were poor. I did not carry my flash unit, but the vireos provided some nice views as they harvested the fruit:



A male Northern Cardinal joined in the feast. His tail feathers were molting::



I wondered why one of my favorite warbler spots was so quiet. Blue Jays were calling from hidden perches in the area. Then this Cooper's Hawk flew in from an adjacent tree. This species is a "true hawk" ( Accipiter) with compact body, short wings and long tail suited for chasing smaller birds through the branches:



The hawk took off, but patrolled the area and returned several times:

Spotted Sandpipers are returning. In spring and summer they have spotted breasts, like this "early bird" on July 11:

Adults like this one photographed on September 3, have clear breasts in fall and winter:

African dust lingered in the atmosphere just before sunrise on August 31, showcasing the dark shadows cast by cloud tops over the Atlantic Ocean. I followed the emerging solar (crepuscular) beams...

...across the southern horizon. Though straight as an arrow, they seemed to curve down opposite the Sun...

...appearing to cluster with other cloud shadows as an anti-solar (anticrepuscular) mirrored "sunrise:"


*Florida Trema (Trema micrantha) is a shrub or small tree up to 10 m tall. It is grouped with Hackberry and Hemp in Tree Family CANNABACEAE.  Leaves are egg-shaped, up to 9 cm long, green on top but covered with white, woolly pubescence underneath. Flowers are greenish-white. Fruits are yellow to bright reddish-orange, up to 4 mm in diameter.

REF: https://www.southfloridatrees.org/?page_id=530

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Linking to:



Skywatch Friday

Weekend Reflections

Saturday's Critters

BirdD'Pot

Camera Critters

All Seasons

Wordless Wednesday (on Tuesday)

Natasha Musing

Our World Tuesday

________________________________________________

Please visit the links to all these posts to see some excellent photos on display
________________________________________________