Showing posts with label waterthrush. Show all posts
Showing posts with label waterthrush. Show all posts

Thursday, August 6, 2020

Crops & Clips: Flashback to August, 2017

I had only 419 images in my archives for the month of August, 2017. Yet, in retrospect, it was a very active month for us, including  5 flights and lots of family, fun, and  photos. As usual, I peered through the retrospectoscope and searched for images which depicted favorite memes-- Critters (especially birds), skyscapes, reflections, fences, flowers and scenes which speak for themselves.

We started out the month at our second home in Northeast Illinois, where a falcon and doves symbolized peace.

An American Kestrel...

.American Kestrel 02-20170802 

... was joined by two Mourning Doves:

American Kestrel with Mourning Doves 05-20170802

Local butterflies included a Painted Lady:

Painted Lady butterfly 03-20170801

We then flew back to Florida on August 5, visiting the local rookery, where the Yellow-crowned Night-Herons had finished breeding. Their legs had turned dark and their crowns have lost their golden hue:

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron 01  E-M10 20170808

I could not resist capturing a closeup crop of this one's face after it had splashed after a fish :

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron 02  CROP E-M10 20170808

An immature Great Blue Heron occupied a high perch:

Great Blue Heron immature 01 E-M10MkII 20170809

A wild Pink Phlox brightened up the barren gravel path:

Wild Pink Phlox E-M10MkII 20170809

I was experimenting with my new Olympus E-M10 Mark II, a mirrorless four-thirds camera with a 75 to 300 mm zoom lens, which I planned to take on our upcoming trips. It is much more compact than my full size Canon 80D with its massive 420 mm prime lens system. I was pleased with its low-light performance, 15 minutes before sunrise on August 9:

Sunrise minus 15 minutes E-M10MkII 20170809

The Olympus produced this nice detail of Melaleuca trees next to a flooded ditch:

Melaleuca Swamp  Bright E-M10 20170808

A hand-held shot of the full Moon was remarkably sharp:

Moon eclipse minus 12 days E-M10MkII 20170809

Sunrise on August 9:

North Shore sunrise plus 5 minuutes E-M10MkII 20170809

We were off to the Texas Panhandle on August 11 to celebrate the wedding of our grandson at the chapel on the grounds of WTAMU (West Texas A&M University) in Canyon, where he was a pre-med student:

WTAMU Chapel 03-20170811

Our son and newly enlarged family:

Schneider family 20170812

The happy couple, after the ceremony:  

Rachel Glen 20170812 

We visited nearby Palo Duro Canyon State Park: 

Palo Duro Canyon 06-20170814

Barn Swallows nested on the porch of the Park headquarters:

Barn Swallow at nest 03-20170814

Rock formations at Palo Duro Canyon resemble imposing architectural structures:

Palo Duro Canyon 05-20170814

American Bison near Buffalo Lake National Wildlife Refuge:

Bison 01-20170814

On August 16, Corpus Christi, Texas was our next destination, where we stayed at a condominium on the Padre Island beach.

Golden Padre Island sunrise (August 17):

Padre Island Sunrise 05-20170817

Padre Island Sunrise 097-20170817

Willet:

Willet 03-20170818

Piping Plover:

Piping Plover 04-20170817

Ruddy Turnstone and Sanderling:

Ruddy Turnstone and Sanderling 02-20170818

Night fishing with our daughter's family off the pier at Aransas Pass:

Fishing Pier 05-20170817

Port Aransas harbor:

Port Aransas 02-20170818

The Lighthouse at Port Aransas, Texas on August 18, 2017. Little did we know that, one week later, Hurricane Harvey would make a direct hit and devastate this harbor:

 Lighthouse 01-20170818

From Texas, we flew back to Illinois on Aug 20.

This Great Egret roosting near the Fox River made me feel as if already back in Florida:

Great Egret 01-20170823

Hoping for one last sighting of the Lark Sparrows in a field near our condo, we only saw a nice male Dickcissel:

Dickcissel male 04-20170825

We arrived back at our permanent Florida home on  August 25. In our back yard, a Tricolored Heron hunted and a fish disturbed the mirror surface of  the lake:

Tricolored Heron 01-20170823

In the local wetlands, a White-tailed Deer buck was in breeding condition:

White-tail Buck 06-20170826

On my birthday, fall land-bird migration had already begun, as evidenced by the arrival of this Northern Waterthrush...

Northern Waterthrush 03-20170829

...and a Blue-gray Gnacatcher:

Blue--gray Gnatcatcher 001 HD-20170828

A large feral hog boar, which usually fled any time we approached, caused concern when he ran across in front of MaryLou, who froze in her tracks. They can be very dangerous, so I started carrying a defensive weapon:

Close Encounter of Porcine Kind 20170829

My photo does not do justice to the metallic silver spots on the undersides of the wings of this Gulf Fritillary:

Gulf Fritillary 2-20170826 

A colorful sunrise from our back patio:

Sunrise from patio 02-20170827


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Linking to:

Fences Around the World

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, April 9, 2020

Bobcat on the Bar Ditch Trail

I have pet names for some of the features of our local Wounded Wetlands preserve. 

Places like the Fake Hammock, the Lantana Patch, the Maple Grove and The Peninsula will not be found on any map. It had been more than four years since I last explored an old farm road which I called the "Bar Ditch Trail" that crosses the wild area west of the Big Levee. 

The trail runs along beside the "borrow" or "bar" ditch that provided the rocks and gravel to raise it slightly higher than the surrounding land which is at the level of the historic Everglades. Unusually high water and overgrowth of exotic vegetation due to a lack of maintenance limited my ability to explore the trail. 

Then, Hurricane Irma dealt a crushing blow by felling many trees which completely blocked entry at the trail head. Only this past month, the tree trunks and branches were cleared away by none other than my nemeses, the Off-Road "Wreckreational" Vehicle crowd. They used chain saws to restore access, which returned to them an old way to wreak havoc in the area. 

My first walks along Bar Ditch Trail have provided me images of, among others...

Northern Cardinal:

Northern Cardinal 01-20200314

Blue-headed Vireo:

Blue-headed Vireo 02-20200313

Orange-crowned Warbler:

  Orange-crowned Warbler 01-20200313 

Northern Waterthrush:

Northern Waterthrush01- 20200313

A pair of Common Ground-Doves:

Common Ground-Doves 20200303

We follow the Big Levee trail for about 0.3 miles (~0.5 km)...

Levee Trailhead 20200316

...to the Bar Ditch trail head:

Bar Ditch Trailhead 06-202000313

Fog lifting at sunrise over the Bar Ditch Trail:

Fog lifting at sunrise over the Bar Ditch trail 02-20200303

The trail runs directly to the west, so my shadow falls directly in front of me on the first day of Spring:

Bar Ditch Trail long shadow 20200320

The bar ditch is on the right (north) of its namesake trail:

Bar Ditch Trail 01-202000313

About 1/3 mile along the trail, a patch of cattails harbored a singing Marsh Wren which was heard but not seen:


Bar Ditch Trail 04-202000313

Just beyond Cattail Patch I had a brief, but  exciting encounter with a Bobcat. It was very early and the rising sun was shining brightly behind me. I was photographing a Gray Catbird...  

Gray Catbird 20200328

...and detected motion in my peripheral field of vision. It was an adult female Bobcat running full tilt down the path, straight towards me! I swung my camera around and captured a burst of over 50 photos.

Crop IMG_4003

Crop IMG_4013

Crop IMG_4015

She was probably blinded by the sunlight and did not see me until she pulled up about 30 feet / 9 meters away:

Crop IMG_4023

IMG_4034

Portrait IMG_4033

Then, acting aloof and nonchalant, she slowly turned and walked away:

IMG_4037

IMG_4040

This slide show video includes the entire sequence of my encounter with the Bobcat:



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Linking to:

Skywatch Friday

Weekend Reflections

Saturday's Critters

BirdD'Pot

Camera Critters

All Seasons

Wordless Wednesday (on Tuesday)

Our World Tuesday

Wild Bird Wednesday
________________________________________________

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