We made a second trip to CJ Brown last evening to catch the American Avocets in the setting sunlight. Also caught some Common Mergansers and a Ring Billed Gull getting a sip of water....
Friday, August 19, 2022
Thursday, August 18, 2022
American Avocets at CJ Brown
Wow! We had some amazing visitors to the CJ Brown Beach today.....16 American Avocets!
From Wikipedia
From Wikipedia
"American avocets were previously found across most of the United States until extirpated from the East Coast. The breeding habitat consists of marshes, beaches, prairie ponds, and shallow lakes in the mid-west, as far north as southern Canada. These breeding grounds are largely in areas just east of the rocky mountains including parts of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Utah, North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, and even down to parts of New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. Their migration route lands them in almost every state in the western United States. The avocet's wintering grounds are mainly coastal. Along the Atlantic Ocean, they are found in North and South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. There are also wintering grounds along the Gulf of Mexico in Florida, Texas, and Mexico, and along the Pacific Ocean in California and Mexico. There are resident populations in the Mexican States of Zacatecas, San Luis PotosÃ, Guanajuato, Hidalgo, Mexico City and Puebla, and in Central California."
While we do see them in Clark County, the most I've see is one or two...not 16!
Sunday, August 7, 2022
Tuesday, July 12, 2022
American Avocet
An American Avocet visited CJ Brown yesterday.
I had seen on the Ohio Birds list that one was seen yesterday morning on the CJ Beach. I didn't think that it would still be there last night when I stopped to photograph the sunset, but there it was....
Not only did it stay all day, but it paraded back and forth in front of me in the amazing sunset light.
What a treat!!
Thursday, July 7, 2022
Cedar Bog Orange Orbeaver
Some looks at an Orange Orbweaver from a visit to Cedar Bog today.
Shot with 60mm macro using 8 shot in-camera focus stacking.
The Orange Orbweaver is fairly rare....only 4 iNaturalist Observations in Ohio!
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