The winter range of this very abundant diving duck just barely includes the southern New England coast. They migrate as far south as Central America in fact. The closely related Greater Scaup is nearly identical but I was able to determine the species of this one once it landed and I could clearly see theContinue reading “Snapshot: Lesser Scaup”
Monthly Archives: March 2025
Feathered Action: Bufflehead Ballet
This is a male Bufflehead performing some courtship action for the benefit of the nearby ladies.
Feathered Action: Gull vs Kingfisher
A Ring-billed Gull tried to steal a fish from a Belted Kingfisher. He had no chance. The Kingfisher is much faster. This was about as close as he got before the Kingfisher pulled away and “left him in the dust”.
Found in the Clutter: Trio in Flight
The three birds flying together are, from left, a Semipalmated Sandpiper, an American Avocet and a Lesser Yellowlegs. The photo was taken in 2022 on Plum Island in Massachusetts. Avocets are rare on the east coast of the US above Virginia. Their usual breeding and migration area is the US west of the Mississippi River.Continue reading “Found in the Clutter: Trio in Flight”
Brant
This small goose is a winter visitor to New England waters. Brants, known in Europe as Brent Geese, breed on the coast of the Arctic Ocean and winter along the Pacific Coast from Alaska to Baja California, the Hudson Bay, the Gulf of St. Lawrence and the New England coast. This small group was partContinue reading “Brant”
Feathered Action: Yellow Warbler
A female Yellow Warbler has captured quite a prize. She was flitting and hopping through the branches of a large tree so I think she was bringing her catch to her nest that was hidden deeper among the foliage.
Feathered Action: Eastern Kingbird
I do a lot of birds-in-flight photography, always hoping to capture a little extra action. These photos show an Eastern Kingbird closing in on it’s prey, a small insect, and snatching it. Kingbirds are a member of the flycatcher family but, interestingly, they are primarily fruit eaters when wintering South America.
Snapshot: Mallard
A female Mallard just about to touch down in the pond.
Long-eared Owl
There are two owls in this photograph. Long-eared Owls have a color pattern that makes them very inconspicuous in the cedar and fir trees where they roost during the day. These two came a little further out into the open than usual. The temperature was about 15F (-9C) and the March sun was shining directlyContinue reading “Long-eared Owl”
Feathered Action: Boat-tailed Grackle
Well this date seems to have gone sideways. This is a tussle between male and female Boat-tailed Grackles over some table scraps at an outdoor cafe. I’m not sure who tried to steal from the other but it doesn’t look like these two will have a second date.