For the past several outdoor outings I’ve been trying to find and photograph some little birds. They’re tough to spot and don’t hang around long for a picture.
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For Snowy Egret, it’s lunch on the boardwalk
A Snowy Egret stopped by to grab a little lunch at the Cypress Boardwalk at the Orlando Wetlands Park. Fortunately for me, I got photograph the whole thing.
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On a quest to see a Painted Bunting
It was a windy, cloudy Saturday when my wife Lisa and I decided to visit the Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, but we had a goal in mind: Try to see a Painted Bunting.
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Shy guy likes to blend in: American Bittern
They’re really shy birds – not sure if it’s because they have a really interesting call. To me it sounds like an amplified version of water dripping.
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Little Green Heron grabs a little lunch
The Green Heron is one of the smallest of the different herons we see in Central Florida, but that small size just makes them more stealthy.
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Cedar Waxwings: When 50-plus birds drop by
I had quite a surprise this evening when looked up in our still-bare Winged Elm tree and noticed a flock of Cedar Waxwings was visiting.
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Checking in on the babies at wetlands park
I visited near sunset on Tuesday and ended up seeing three sets of youngsters – baby Roseate Spoonbills, baby Great Egrets and, of course, Sandhill Crane colts.
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Evening puts Wetlands Park in new light
It wasn’t until this past Saturday that I visited Orlando Wetlands Park in the evening, and what a difference there was.
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Sandhill Crane colts growing up: 1 week old
I photographed this pair of Sandhill Crane colts when they were just two days old. Now, they are a little more than a week old.
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Great Egret babies: Faces only a mother could love
The first thing that came to my mind when seeing them was how prehistoric they look, like some character out of one of the Jurassic Park franchise movies.