Ephemeral stories1/8/2024 hatched! Below is an image taken from video that was captured with a smartphone (I have to extend my arm all the way up and blindly take a photo pointing down). The first baby bird, or what’s called a “hatchling” at this stage, has, well. Well, there’s always next time as there is no shortage of deer around here! Posted in Website Bald Eagle Tries to Snatch Fish Away from Osprey It was not far off the main path, so I could have backed up and walked further away, but that thought never crossed my mind. So I pointed my camera at it and remained as still as possible, hoping it would go back to doing it’s business so I could capture a candid shot, but that just never happened. Obviously, it saw me long before I saw it. So as I was walking along a certain tract of the Tinicum wildlife refuge, I happened to spot this young buck. Young Buck with Antlers in the Woods of Pennsylvania So my focus (pun not intended) has been up in the trees and the sky, rarely on the ground, unless I spot a bird on the ground, a turtle, or something moving. It’s almost 2 weeks that I’ve owned my first long lens, the Sony 200-600mm, as well as the Sony A7 IV, and the local places I’ve been visiting are chock full of all kinds of wildlife, mostly birds. Posted in Website Evil Dead The Game – An Idea for a Lovecraft / Cthulhu Expansion DLC See the larger size images on my Flickr: See the rest of this photo series on my Instagram: I just hope this isn’t the first and last time I ever see one again… So I did! Who am I to question the universe!? After taking several photos, I then meandered on my way. This time it was finding the above pictured lone Cedar Waxwing in a bare tree just waiting for me to photograph it. And wouldn’t you know it: once again I find myself in one of these once-in-a-lifetime moments and experiences where fate is pulling me along on strings. I decided to take a walk around a particular loop that I haven’t explored before. I was out and about in early June (2022) at John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge in Tinicum, Pennsylvania. ![]() All I can tell you is that for the past 51 years of my life, I’ve never encountered a single one! Until now! Photo of a Cedar Waxwing as it sits alone in a bare tree at the John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge in Tinicum, Pennsylvania I’m not sure how common or rare the Cedar Waxwing is here in Pennsylvania.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |