A good sign as this is the mascot of the Black Swamp Bird Observatory(cheap plug!)...
Since I haven't been in the mood to post much lately, I thought I'd make you all suffer greatly by putting too many photos for you to look at in one sitting. Ha!
When we heard from Julie at BSBO's Navarre banding station that they had a great number of migrant warbly things flying through with a few stopping by to visit the nets, we knew we had to make a visit to Magee Marsh. So here ya go, a few a the many things we saw at Magee this weekend.
She managed to break both of her little toes this summer! That slowed down her bird outings...
It's an Owlet Moth...now I have to buy a Moth guide to figure out which one...great...
This is an Eastern Comma butterfly.
Not much to look at in this pose...
If you click on the closed wing photo you will see the whitish 'comma' on it's wing.
The birds were smarter than us and hid in the shade.
This is our friend Judy standing in the shade of my camera. It didn't work...
They're very skittish, and just plain dislike me(not unusual.)
We didn't realize they bred in this area.
What a pain in the a** trying to get a shot of them!
I think they were all a bunch of nervous Lesser Yellowlegs...white butt...too much time in Canada, eh...
 There were a gang of Red-bellied Woodpeckers along the boardwalk.
There were a gang of Red-bellied Woodpeckers along the boardwalk.This one didn't like heights...or banging on the trees.
He preferred the easy pickings from the leaves down low...and safe...and quiet...
A juvenile Yellow-billed Cuckoo waiting for mom to fly in with a big juicy caterpillar!
***SNAKE WARNING***
This is a warning, especially for my friend Chris in Iceland...he doesn't appreciate scaly things.
And I'm sure someone will let me know if it isn't...thank you.


 
 
Really great Dave.
ReplyDeleteHi Dave,
ReplyDeleteFirs what.... there is not behind of birds there or almost none ;-) Second, what a beautiful post full of beautiful birds. I love the Black-throated Blue Warbly.
Thanks for the link to my blog, and you're right mate, i would never have been able to get close to this snaky thing.. How brave you were ;-)
Thanks Bob!
ReplyDeletePoor Chris...I'll have to send you a snake...I wonder if will go through the mail?
Well I guess it will not and you will go to jail then, cause Iceland has terrible rules for that. No import of indigenous animal sir!!
ReplyDeleteOh by the way, I like scaly things, you know, I'm kind of working with fish everyday, but snake... I just can't since I've been working with eels... sluggy, frightening and so on... That's probably why I work on whales nowadays ;-)
Chris, I shall behave and not send any snakes your way. You can keep your eels and we'll call it even.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
No no no eels anymore... and it is kind of hard to stay on whale, but it is much more fun than fish genetics anyway ;-)
ReplyDeleteGreat serie of verry diversified images! The little red bug is verry interesting ;)
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ReplyDelete(I pushed the wrong key, oops. Where was I?...)
ReplyDeleteThanks Dominic! I was hoping for an answer about that bug...
Hello again Chris...and they say scientists have no sense of humor...ha!
Excellent group of shots, a lot of interesting things. Im fond of female Black throated Blue,I don't know of another bird that has that green tone.
ReplyDeleteIt looks good for Eastern Fox Snake, I just saw one at Long Point Ontario (http://www.ontfin.com/Word/eastern-fox-snake-elaphe-gloydi/) and they seem to be found in Michigan and Ontario, and not common in either place.
Thanks Harold! That is a rare snake for our area.
ReplyDelete