January has been, literally, for the birds but I am grateful for each one; how desolate the winter woods would seem without them...
After a long night of steady rain I found these five turkey gobblers (males) in a field behind our house...
The sky was still heavily overcast and not favorable for photography, but one must take the photograph when the opportunity presents itself...
Activity was limited to searching for breakfast, preening and drying their feathers...
A lot of wing flapping goes into ridding the wings of water...
They also fluff up their feathers and shake the water off...
Gobblers have a fleshy protuberance above their bill called a snood. The snood fills up with blood and is very pronounced when a gobbler is strutting to impress a female. Studies show that longer-snooded turkeys tend to be more dominant. The next images show a longer-snooded gobbler intimidating a gobbler with a smaller snood - really, I am not making this up...
Having five turkeys in camera range is not a regular occurrence for me; for them all to be gobblers is even more uncommon...
I watched them until they moved out of sight...
This great blue heron was on the edge of a creek early one morning...
On a different day, and a different stream, I spotted another heron. This one was obscured by weeds and branches but I found a place where I could get a clear shot by using the vegetation to frame it...
Eastern bluebirds are still plentiful in the thickets...
Barred owls have excellent camouflage. This image was taken with my lens zoomed back to its shortest focal length and approximates how it appeared to the naked eye...
Zooming out to 600mm helps a great deal...
Possibly the same owl, but on a different day, with different lighting conditions...
This male pileated woodpecker hung around for an unusually long time...
The next image is of a female, giving me hope that there will be a nest to photograph soon...
Next is the male again, with better light...
These large birds also search for food on fallen trees...
It is not hard to see why the cartoon character of Woody Woodpecker is believed to have been inspired by a pileated...
Great pics Steve
ReplyDelete