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New life, and new life in the making


Canada Geese babies have arrived at Mud Lake. I saw these very young goslings on May 11th, after watching the mother brood for about a month.


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Northern Flickers are a species of ground-foraging woodpeckers. They are in my opinion the most beautiful woodpeckers in North America, but they are also the most skittish. I've been trying for over a month to capture their beauty in a picture that does them justice.

This is not that picture. It is, however, interesting because of what the flickers appear to be doing...



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Warbling Vireo, Night Heron




Even the plain birds deserve their day--especially when they sing as prettily as a Warbling Vireo!


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A much more successful Black-Crowned Night Heron shot than my last one. Still not a very pretty backdrop, but what can I do for a bird that loves swamps? This Night Heron seems surprisingly gangly--it's more common for them to look plump and hunched over. Maybe he lost weight over his long migration.

The strand hanging out at his neck is a breeding plume. Night Herons grow them quite long in spring to attract mates.

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Stealth




I couldn't get him to come out in the open, but I guess it made a good picture this way, too.

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White-Crowned Sparrow, first of spring






White-Crowned Sparrows are boreal breeders who appear in Ottawa only in migration--in fact, their summer range only just edges into northern Ontario. Like most birds of the far north, they have little fear of humans, hopping out onto open paths, rocky ledges and exposed branches right in front of us. Needless to say, this is pleasant for photographers!

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And then sometimes mother nature gives you a big, wet kiss



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For real. A Baltimore Oriole, my sentimental favorite of all songbirds, landed in a flowering tree, posed, preened, and flopped around while I watched at eye level from a nearby hillside. Mother nature said "mwah!"

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Meditative



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Common Grackle. Another one that came out surprisingly painting-like.

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Woodland Blackbird




It's so nice to have leaves again, so my bokehs can be green instead of gray!

"The Ridge" at Britannia (a strip of elevated land between Mud Lake and the Deschenes Rapids) is a prime location for Red-Winged Blackbirds in spring. Females nest down on either side of it, and the males perch to sing and display their epaulets. As the season progresses they become more and more lackadaisical about the presence of humans--at least they certainly don't seem to feel intimidated by us. That makes them fun to photograph.

There probably are or soon will be nestling redwings, not that I'm likely to ever see any until they fledge. They'll stay safely hidden in the cattails for now.

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Aviamania


We've now entered the stage of bird migration known as "Yellow-Rumped Warblers take over the universe." Females and juveniles have arrived and flocks are everywhere, outnumbering even the chickadees. This one is, I think, a yearling male:



A Great Crested Flycatcher gave me a slightly less awkward view of himself (than last time). This is a common breeding bird at Mud Lake and many other places--and one of the noisiest! Its "crest" is really just a ruffling of the crown feathers and is not always apparent.



Not many new species today. There's more to come, but we're in a lull. I did see my first Barn Swallow of the year, and, belatedly, this:



This picture sucks, owing to the fact that it was taken in a swampy tangle of woods from about a hundred feet away. But I give a large leeway for interesting birds that I've never managed to photograph before. This is a Black-Crowned Night Heron. Several pairs of them breed near Mud Lake each year. It's not obvious from the picture, but they stand about two feet high.

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Painted Turtle




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Palm Warbler


I spent about an hour trying to photograph this bashful Palm Warbler (first of spring). He eventually got somewhat used to me and came out of thick cover long enough for a few good shots.





Palm Warblers breed almost exclusively in black spruce bogs in the boreal forests of Canada. Their only known breeding location in Ottawa is Mer Bleue--which, as you know if you've been there, is an unusual psuedo-boreal habitat of a sort found nowhere else in our area.

In spring migration, though, Palm Warblers are a common sight all over Ottawa, usually hopping around in bushes and wagging their tails constantly. This one was near the Rideau river.

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