More Rain, More Geese, and Something New

Geese Jan 15

Today’s cold rain trapped me between overdue errands and a warm afternoon in bed with a book. After procrastinating most of the morning, I decided to hurry through my errands, which might get me home in time to spend a few hours with my book.

I didn’t intend to stop anywhere for photos, but packed my camera by mistake as I rushed to leave the house. A few hours later, when it became clear that my errand list was too long and the day too short, I decided to slow down and take advantage of my mistake. If I couldn’t get to my book, I could at least take a few photos.

Cormorants Jan 15

As I splashed toward these cormorants, wishing for a thicker coat and waterproof shoes, a group of smallish ducks emerged from a hidden spot near the bank.

Mergansers Jan 15

They were a new species for me, and I could hardly wait to get home and look them up. (Are they Hooded Mergansers?)

Mergansers Jan 15

I’m adding this pond to my list of places to revisit, should we ever get another sunny day…

A Foggy Day at Back Bay

Web Back Bay Jan 12

Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge is one of my favorite places. It’s basically a sandy ridge of land between two major bodies of water. Some of its hiking trails wind over high dunes and trickle down to the Atlantic Ocean. Other trails slither through the salt marshes that border Back Bay.

Each winter, thousands of migrating birds pass through the refuge. So today, despite gray, misty skies, we decided to spend a few hours looking for geese.

At first, all we found was fog.

Back Bay Jan 12

The further we walked, the thicker the fog.

Back Bay Jan 12

Back Bay Jan 12

On the beach, there were no horizons. The view simply faded into nothingness.

Back Bay Jan 12

Every so often, the fog thinned a bit. Then the world regained its edges, though none of the edges seemed fixed. Everything was blurred and soft.

Back Bay Jan 12

Back Bay Jan 12

Back Bay Jan 12

Back Bay Jan 12

Back Bay Jan 12

We walked nearly an hour before seeing or hearing any geese. Then… Snow Geese!

Snow Geese Jan 12

Snow geese everywhere! Geese as far as the eye could see (which, admittedly, wasn’t very far)…

Snow Geese Jan 12

Snow Geese Jan 12

Snow Geese Jan 12

(Please pardon the inconsistent focus and poor light. It really was quite foggy.)

Snow Geese Jan 12

Snow Geese Jan 12

Photos can’t sufficiently convey the scene. Sound was a major part of the magic.

After a while, we began to notice other birds hidden among the geese. In particular, swans. (I think these might be Tundra Swans?)

Swan Jan 12

Swan Jan 12

Swan Jan 12

And American Coots.

Coot Jan 12

Coot Jan 12

Coot Jan 12

It was hard to walk away from such a glorious scene, but nightfall’s approach turned the fog almost impenetrable.

Snow Geese Jan 12

As we were leaving, the geese were still arriving. One group landed right beside us, inside the shrinking sphere of the fog’s miasma.

Snow Geese Jan 12

Along the return trail, we found ducks. (I can’t begin to guess what kind of ducks…)

Ducks Jan 12

Ducks Jan 12

And finally, right beside the parking lot, we surprised a solitary Great Blue Heron.

Heron Jan 12

Heron Jan 12

It was a beautiful way to end a beautiful, foggy day…

Back Bay Jan 12

Cormorants and a Grebe

Squirrel Jan 10

Over the past few weeks I’ve been seeing cormorants on nearby ponds. Usually small groups, four or five at a time, and never when my camera is ready. As today’s warm, bright sunshine seemed wasted on a half-tame squirrel in an overfull bird feeder, I grabbed my keys and a jacket and started walking.

My first stop brought instant success.

Cormorant Jan 10

And this was no small group of cormorants.

Cormorant Jan 10

It was a cormorant flock, dotted here and there with seagulls.

Cormorant Jan 10

Cormorant Jan 10

It was too easy, and after a few frames I turned my attention to an adjacent canal. I saw a flicker of movement, a small brown and white flash that left a few ripples to prove I had not been hallucinating. Moments later, this little grebe surfaced long enough to allow a single photo.

Grebe Jan 10

I wasn’t certain, at first, that it really was a grebe. When it reappeared, too far down the canal for my lens, I followed. For the next half-hour, I chased my shy target up and down a hundred yard stretch of water. It would bob to the surface, linger long enough to catch my eye, then dive again. When it tired of diving, it retreated to areas blocked by branches, forcing me to thread the camera’s focus through gaps so small that the slightest movement ruined my shots.

Grebe Jan 10

Grebe Jan 10

When I finally found a good vantage point and had the opportunity to line up a clear photo, I got so excited that I moved too fast, stepped on a branch, and frightened the grebe into another fifteen minutes of prolonged diving. Almost ready to give up, I turned my attention to a pair of ducks.

Mallards Jan 10

Then the grebe popped back into sight, drifted into a clear spot, and seemed to pose. Almost as if it had tired of our chase. (I believe this is a pied-billed grebe. Please comment, if you can correct or confirm my identification.)

Grebe Jan 10

Grebe Jan 10

After taking these photos, I became aware of a disturbance on the pond behind me. Small, repeated splashes…

Cormorant Jan 10

At first, I couldn’t tell what was happening. Then I realized that the cormorants had begun fishing.

Cormorant Jan 10

Cormorant Jan 10

Cormorant Jan 10

They dove over and over again. Sometimes the entire flock disappeared underwater.

Cormorant Jan 10

Cormorant Jan 10

I soon realized why the gulls were there. Each time a cormorant surfaced with a particularly tempting catch, the gulls attacked, shrieking with greed.

Cormorant Jan 10

Cormorant Jan 10

Cormorant Jan 10

The attacks only stopped when a family arrived with a bag of bread, luring the gulls away with the promise of easier food.

I took a few more pictures before leaving the pond, catching a group of sleepy ducks and a northern shoveler.

Mallards Jan 10

Shoveler Jan 10

Then I headed home, eager to download my photos and put together a new blog post. (Partly because I’m still in the learning phase, when it comes to bird identification, and I would love a little help naming these cormorants and gulls!)

Photos, January 1

The year’s first frames were disappointing. I stretched my camera’s zoom too far, resulting in poorly focused photos with a flat, grainy look.

Heron Jan 1

Heron Jan 1

Then there was a tempting glimpse of a kingfisher. (I couldn’t get any closer because there was a canal in the way.)

Kingfisher Jan 1

View Jan 1

On my side of the canal, I watched this partially uprooted tree for a long time. Doesn’t it look like something should live under it?

View Jan 1

In the end, after miles of aimless driving and four forays through a wind that was colder than I had expected, the day’s best photo was found in a roadside ditch…

Heron Jan 1

Home Again

Yesterday, I flew home through the southern-most remnants of Hurricane Sandy. The flight was a bit bumpy, though not as rough as I had anticipated. I went to bed early and slept late this morning, then meant to spend much of my day in the yard, which is cluttered with knotweed and wind-torn leaves. But as I knelt in a patch of damp grass, acutely aware of the contrast between the yard’s October-cold ground and a breezy sky full of summer-warm sunshine, I changed plans.

The ocean was restless, tossing sets of foaming waves onto a beach swept flat and clean. I watched as a ship pulled out of the Chesapeake Bay, and I hoped that it was headed north, carrying help to areas devastated by Sandy.

Trying to distract myself from overwhelming images of flooding and destruction, I spent the next half-hour photographing pelicans.

Eventually, my phone chimed an appointment reminder, which I barely heard over the ocean’s tumble and growl.

My route to the appointment carried me past First Landing State Park, so I stopped for a quick glance at the Chesapeake Bay.

(That’s the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel, in the background.)

I only stayed about fifteen minutes, and in that short time clouds swallowed the sun. I assumed these clouds were related to the storm, or to the cold front that fed its monstrous transformation into a super-storm. Either way, I returned to my car with a heavy heart, helplessly small and weak under such a beautiful, terrible sky.