Soft Landing - Snowy Heron
John at the Beach
Registered Users Posts: 32 Big grins
Landing and not scaring the minnows away is tricky, but not for this guy...
Hardly made a ripple...
Hardly made a ripple...
0
Comments
Bud
Bud....
Thanks for taking a look and leaving a comment...I watched this guy for about 45 minutes...His fishing skills were awesome...He didn't leave hungry...:eat
http://danielplumer.com/
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I was driven crazy trying to properly identify birds even before getting into photography. Receiving, as a present, the Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Birds, failed to help much.
But I decided to gain confidence focusing upon Egrets, where the odds are pretty good.
So I believe your lovely bird would be a Snowy Egret rather than a Snowy Heron, which isn't even in the book.
Still a magnificent picture by either name.
Thanks IBE...After reading your message I did a google myself and came up with this....
" Snowy Egret - medium sized white heron found near water. The Snowy Egret (Egretta thula) is a small white heron. It is the American counterpart to the very similar Old World Little Egret, which has established a foothold in the Bahamas.
Adults are typically 61 cm long and weigh 375 g. They have a slim black bill and long black legs with yellow feet. The area of the upper bill, in front of the eyes, is yellow but turns red during the breeding season, when the adults also gain recurved plumes on the back, making for a "shaggy" effect.
Their breeding habitat is large inland and coastal wetlands from the lower Great Lakes and southwestern United States to South America. The breeding range in eastern North America extends along the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts from Maine to Texas, and inland along major rivers and lakes. They nest in colonies, often with other waders, usually on platforms of sticks in trees or shrubs. Their flat, shallow nests are made of sticks and lined with fine twigs and rushes. Three to four greenish-blue, oval eggs are incubated by both adults. The young leave the nest in 20 to 25 days and hop about on branches near the nest before finally departing.
In warmer locations, some Snowy Egret are permanent residents; northern populations migrate to Central America and the West Indies.
The birds eat fish, crustaceans, and insects. They stalk prey in shallow water, often running or shuffling their feet, flushing prey into view, as well "dip-fishing" by flying with their feet just over the water. Snowy Egrets may also stand still and wait to ambush prey, or hunt for insects stirred up by domestic animals in open fields."
This comes from this link.........
http://www.surfbirds.com/namericanbirds/heron-egret.html
Like you, it drives me nuts not knowing what I have a shot of...I took a photo of the Snowy several years ago and posted it as an Egret...I was corrected back then telling me it was a Heron...So I stuck with Heron...Now with your message I am back to Egret....Reading several places that I have googled, I now see that He/She is a Snowy Egret which is a member of the Heron family....So what do you think about calling this guy either one....Snowy Heron or Snowy Egret......
Thanks Tosser....but I do want to be "Politically Correct"....:nah
http://behret.smugmug.com/ NANPA member
How many photographers does it take to change a light bulb? 50. One to change the bulb, and forty-nine to say, "I could have done that better!"
Rule of thumb....
Snowy Egret - Black bill, yellow feet
White Heron - Yellow bill, black feet