Showing posts with label Black-throated Blue Warbler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black-throated Blue Warbler. Show all posts

Thursday, October 7, 2021

Crops & Clips: Flashback to October, 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. 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 month at home in south Florida. I processed 629 images during October, 2018.

We were disheartened as the heron rookery in our birding patch was targeted for destruction when the County Drainage District marked all the trees which had been damaged by Hurricane Irma in September, 2017. They also planned to cut back all the vegetation that extended over the canal. This would amount to clear-cutting more than half of the trees and shrubs which served as homes for as many as 8-10 pairs of Yellow-crowned Night Herons, 3-5 Green Herons and occasional Black-crowned Night-Herons.

Adult Green Heron roosting on partly submerged tree in canal on October 1:

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron roosting on tree marked for removal on October 13:

Mature Locust trees which hosted two Yellow-crowned Night-Heron nests were marked to be felled in early November. Although healthy, they, as well as many other trees growing along the bank were deemed to be a potential hazard if another storm blew then into the canal:



The rookery is on the right (east) bank of this storm water drainage canal. The herons almost always nested in the branches which extend over the water. The dead branches out in the water are from trees blown into the water by the hurricane:
  

Near the rookery, a flooded woodland where the hurricane brought down many trees was then set afire by vandals. This created a tangle of burnt logs which a Louisiana Waterthrush found to be very hospitable:



Southbound Painted Buntings migrants appeared on October 3. Some may linger here during the winter::

On the lake, Double-crested Cormorants swam in tandem:


A Northern Mockingbird perched in the Lantana patch. The Lantana berries are attractive to wildlife:


The Northern Cardinals had completed their molt and were in fine feather:

Killdeers had finished breeding but continued to occupy and defend their nesting territories:

The blooming Lantana attracted butterflies, among them a Giant Swallowtail:


A male Common Yellowthroat. This warbler species breeds locally but its numbers are increased by migrants from the north:

Yellow-throated Warblers made their appearance. Their breeding range includes the northern half of Florida but we welcome them as winter residents:


Black-throated Blue Warblers are especially fond of fruits and berries. Here, a male works his way down to the prize:


A southbound Rose-breasted Grosbeak stopped by:

This male Scarlet Tanager has exchanged its bright red body plumage for olive green before migrating through Florida:

A Great Egret rested on a treetop against a pink sky at sunrise:

White-eyed Vireos breed locally but many probably migrate to Cuba and are replaced by winter residents from the north:

This Monarch butterfly carried a tag with a phone number. I learned that it had been bred in a volunteer's back yard and released about 5 miles from our home. 

The local Bald Eagles returned and were beginning their breeding season. This is a portrait of Pride, the male of the pair:

Double rainbow on October 16:

Hunter's Moon over the Pine Bank on October 26:

I prepared this week's post in advance but may be occupied by health-related appointments and procedures for a while. Hope to be back soon.

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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

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Please visit the links to all these posts to see some excellent photos on display
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Thursday, September 30, 2021

Fall migration

Autumn officially arrived and I visited the boardwalk at nearby Chapel Trail Nature Preserve. A Great Egret happened to pose almost directly  under the day-old Harvest Moon:

I was surprised at how quickly the Moon drifted down:

Shooting between tree branches, I had to contort to place the Moon behind the egret:

The egret was not impressed and went about preening:

Actually, I had photographed the Moon a few minutes earlier, moved a short distance along the boardwalk and was lucky to look up and see the egret in a treetop: 

View from the dock near the beginning of the boardwalk. The wet prairie is now flooded and the spike-rush is flourishing. 

Although the morning radar showed heavy migration, birding was very slow. This is the Doppler velocity image at 5:00 AM on September 24. Green echoes are approaching Miami and red are heading away towards The Bahamas and Cuba. Our home is at the small red "+" which seems to be in the heart of the action.

Instead of finding warblers dripping off the trees I logged only a single species. a Prairie Warbler:

A Blue-gray Gnatcatcher was my consolation prize. A distracting dozen or more frolicked in the trees:

A grumpy Anhinga was sunning at the far end of the boardwalk. She protested my intrusion so I backed off after snapping a few images. Her red eyes glistened like jewels:


Non-avian objects of interest included a pair of mating Halloween Pennant dragonflies:

...and a Green Anole:


I had better luck in the Wounded Wetlands near our home. A Female Golden-winged Warbler showed up on September 20, my first ever record of this species in the local patch:


More Blue-gray Gnatcatchers livened up the scene:

A Prairie Warbler hover-gleaned for insects:

Another Prairie Warbler was missing his tail feathers. They should be finished molting and generally only replace tail feathers in pairs. Therefore this may have resulted from a close call with a predator such as a pursuing hawk. As bird banders can attest, some birds will "blow" all their tail feathers when severely threatened or to avoid being captured.

Other warblers included a female Black-throated Blue Warbler, here peering out from Ligustrum blossoms and berries...

..and a drab female or possibly first year male Common Yellowthroat:

Acrobatic Black-and-White Warblers seemed to defy gravity while seeking insects hidden in the bark of a Live Oak:



A Northern Parula warbler was mostly out of sight:

An inquisitive Red-eyed Vireo paid a brief visit:

Oh those eyes! A Brown Thrasher peered out between the leaves:

A migrating male Baltimore Oriole added welcome color to the scene:


Out on the lake, only 5 minutes after sunrise, the Harvest Moon hovered over a swirling cloud (A nice example of the low-light performance of my iPhone 11 Pro Max):



= = =  = = =  = = = =  = = = = =

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
________________________________________________