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Roger Simmons
Roger Simmons

Birds, Words, Pics + TV

Photographing my 100th bird – who would it be?

Roger Simmons, May 20, 2023June 13, 2023

After I started my new bird photography pastime on Jan. 1, I created a catalog of all the different types of birds I’ve been able to shoot.

The other day I tallied the total and realized I was approaching 100 different birds. After a recount, it turned out I was very, very close – just one bird away from hitting the century mark.

It’s been quite the journey.

The very first bird I photographed this year was a Roseate Spoonbill at Orlando Wetlands Park. The colorful pink bird was a great one to start off a new hobby.

This Roseate Spoonbill was photographed at Orlando Wetlands Park on Jan. 1, 2023 – my first photo on my first visit to the wetlands with camera in hand.

Since then, I’ve visited the Orlando Wetlands again, again and again to take a lot of bird pictures. I have also photographed birds at the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge near Titusville, at random spots in Osceola County and at Fort DeSoto Park near St. Petersburg. I even took some bird photos on the islands I visited while on a Caribbean cruise.

Those trips brought my bird total to 99. Not all of them are fantastic photos — there are definitely some birds I want to have a chance to photograph again. But, still, 99 birds.

But what would be my 100th bird? Would it be be something exotic? Or rare? Or maybe even one that was endangered? I was eager to find out.

On Friday evening, I went to the UCF Arboretum to search for lucky No. 100 — hoping to maybe photograph some Purple Martins I’ve heard there at sunset. But the lighting was bad, and the birds were too fast and too high to get a clear picture.

On Saturday morning, I went back to my familiar spot, the Orlando Wetlands. About 80 percent of the birds in my catalog have been photographed there, but I wondered if I could really find a new bird I haven’t already photographed — and at this time of year when most birds are leaving instead of arriving?

After a lot of walking and searching, I found what I thought was a Cape May Warbler, a cute tiny bird flittering about in the trees. This could be No. 100! As I was trying to photograph it, a group of noisy bicyclists came by on the trail and immediately scared the bird away. Dang it!

It looked like the century mark would elude me for another day.

Just as I had given up hope and was driving out of the park, I spied a bird I had not photographed before.

Surprisingly, it’s a pretty common bird, but it was not in my catalog.

My 100th bird photographed was … a Wild Turkey.

A Wild Turkey walks across a pasture near the entrance to Orlando Wetlands Park in May 2023.

This turkey was roaming around in a pasture near the OWP entrance and was much easier to photograph than most of the birds on my list. It looked like a young bird or possibly a female.

So, my 100th bird was a real turkey, but I am oh, so thankful for it. I’ve been able to photograph 100 different birds in 140 days. Not bad!

Below is the list of my 100 birds but you can see the list and the pictures of the birds in my catalog at this link.

American Avocet
American Bittern
American Coot
American Goldfinch
American Robin
American White Pelican
Anhinga
Bald Eagle
Bananaquit
Barred Owl
Belted Kingfisher
Black Vulture
Black-bellied Plover
Black-bellied Whistling Duck
Black-crowned Night Heron
Black-Necked Stilt
Blue-Gray Gnatcatcher
Blue Grosbeak
Blue Jay
Blue-Winged Teal
Boat-Tailed Grackle
Brown-Headed Nuthatch
Borwn Pelican
Brown Thasher
Carolina Wren
Caspian Tern
Cattle Egret
Cedar Waxwing
Chinese Goose
Common Gallinule
Common Yellowthroat
Double-Crested Cormorant
Downey Woodpecker
Eastern Meadowlark
Eastern Towhee
European Starling
Florida Scrub Jay
Glossy Ibis
Gray Catbird
Gray Kingbird
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Greater Yellowlegs
Green Heron
Herring Gull
House Sparrow
Laughing Gull
Least Bittern
Least Tern
Limpkin
Little Blue Heron
Loggerhead Shrike
Magnificent Frigatebird
Marsh Wren
Merlin
Mottled Duck
Mourning Dove
Muscovy Duck
Nanday Parakeet
Northern Cardinal
Northern Flicker
Northern Mockingbird
Northern Parula
Northern Shoveler
Osprey
Osprey (Bahamas species)
Painted Bunting
Palm Warbler
Peafowl
Pie-billed Grebe
Pileated Woodpecker
Prairie Warbler
Purple Gallinule
Red-Bellied Woodpecker
Reddish Egret
Red-Shouldered Hawk
Red-Winged Blackbird
Roseat Spoonbill
Royal Mute Swan
Royal Tern
Ruddy Turnstone
Sanderling
Sandhill Crane
Savannah Sparrow
Semi-palmated Plover
Swallow-tailed Kite
Swamp Sparrow
Tree Swallow
Tricolored Heron
Tufted Titmouse
Turkey Vulture
White Ibis
Wild Turkey
Willet
Wilson’s Plover
Wood Stork
Yellow-crowned Night Heron
Yellow-Rumped Warbler
Yellow-Throated Warbler
Zenaida Doves

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