And those stills still resonate, the visions of birds surprising or being where expected, but in bright light, spring plumage and full-throated song…thus is birding near to magic. Here a male Cinnamon Teal refused to leave his roadside ditch at P Ranch, even after we parked twenty feet away and rolled down the windows.
Posted by: atowhee | June 3, 2019
MALHEUR–STILL MORE STILLS
Posted in birding, birds, ducks and geese, Uncategorized | Tags: Cinnamon Teal, Malheur
Responses
Leave a Reply
Categories
- Agate Lake
- ashland
- Baskett Slough NWR
- Bear Creek
- birding
- birds
- birdsong
- butterfly
- california
- carnivore
- Cascades
- Clark Creek Park
- Coast Range
- conservation
- corvids
- cranes
- Dipper
- ducks & geese
- ducks and geese
- eagles
- Ecuador
- Emigrant Lake
- Eurasian birds
- European birds
- finches
- fish
- flora
- global warming
- Hawaii birds
- Howard Prairie Lake
- hummingbird
- Icterids
- insect
- Klamath Basin
- mammals
- marin
- Marion County
- McMinnville
- migratory birds
- Mill Creek Wetlands
- Mount Ashland
- natural history
- nesting
- ocean birds
- oregon
- OREOGON
- ornithology history
- owl
- rails
- raptor
- rarities
- reptile
- research
- Rogue River
- Salem
- san francisco
- San JUan Islands
- shorebirds
- Siskiyous
- sparrows
- squirrels
- swallow
- Table Rock
- trees
- tropical birds
- tyrant flycatcher
- Uganda
- Uncategorized
- vagrants
- warblers
- Washington State
- Willamette Valley
- winter birds
- woodpeckers
- wren
- Yamhill County
I took your class at the Community center recently. You might want to check out a professor at Willamette Univ. named Craig who is really into birding. Also since your class I have found an app that will identify the 🐦 if you hold the phone up to hear the 🐦 sing. Thanks 😊
By: Ann on June 5, 2019
at 11:45 am
Reblogged this on Wolf's Birding and Bonsai Blog.
By: africanbirding on June 18, 2019
at 11:00 pm