View allAll Photos Tagged Indigo
I finally was able to get a photo of a indigo bunting after being told we have them around, I guess I might have not had the right timing to start with.
Another great view of a male Indigo Bunting. Such magnificent colour, I can't stop photographing them.
Indigo Bunting (Passerina cyanea), breeding males are entirely blue with a slightly darker head. Females are plain brown with a whitish throat, bluish tail, and faint streaks on the underparts. Breeds in shrubby areas at the edge of forests and fields. Males often sing from a high exposed perch.
Two days in a row, I was privileged to see an Indigo Bunting. The second has less colour, maybe a bit less mature.
A beautiful Indigo Bunting on top of a sunflower- the seeds have not developed yet so it did not hang around that morning!
Indigo bunting singing his heart out.
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Also Includes Tram & Yummy @ The Fifty Event.
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The male Indigo Buntings have a lot of brown the first year and eventually turn mostly blue by the second. The females have a buff color with a few hints of blue. This guy flew into this butterfly bush while I was photographing humming birds.
Indigo Bunting bringing a little spice to our life. You can tell by the beak that they are in the Cardinal family. They are big eaters of seeds and difficult to miss.
This photo was taken with a 600 prime and a 2x resulting in the very soft background.
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Featuring this lovely Living Room Indigo Set, It is a collaboration between
Fancy Decor & Commoner you can find it @ Collabor 88
All Details and other Decorations items are listed below .
• FD & Commoner: Indio Sofa - Blue
• FD & Commoner: Indio Accent Chair
• FD & Commoner: Indio Coffee Table
• FD & Commoner: Indio Storage Shelf
• FD & Commoner: Indio Basket
• FD & Commoner: Indio Horn
• FD & Commoner: Indio Books
• Fancy Decor: Grantaire Jugs
• FD & Commoner: Indio Wall Art
• FD & Commoner: Indio Pottery A
• FD & Commoner: Indio Pottery B
• FD & Commoner: Indio Mug
• FD & Commoner: Indio Side Table
• FD & Commoner: Indio Cactus Planter
• FD & Commoner: Indio Hourglass
• FD & Commoner: Indio Magazine
• FD & Commoner: Indio Candle
• FD & Commoner: Indio Rug
• FD & Commoner: Indio Floor Lamp
Other Items
• House - L2 Studio DOVE BAY HOUSE
• Soy. Potted Cactus Opuntia
• Soy. Superlong potted cactus A
• Dahlia - Babylon Eclectic - Roxanne Cactus - Yellow
• [Merak] - Canvas Sneakers Decor
• Dust Bunny - potted bromeliad
• Dust Bunny - potted bromeliad
• Mithral * Hanging Propagation Set (Natural Wood)
The all-blue male Indigo Bunting sings with cheerful gusto and looks like a scrap of sky with wings. Sometimes nicknamed "blue canaries," these brilliantly colored yet common and widespread birds whistle their bouncy songs through the late spring and summer all over eastern North America. Look for Indigo Buntings in weedy fields and shrubby areas near trees, singing from dawn to dusk atop the tallest perch in sight or foraging for seeds and insects in low vegetation.
An Indigo Bunting clinging to a branch during early fall migration and molt last year. Have had a meh year so far for fall warblers and other birds so am going back into the archives
Absolutely love trying to photograph Indigo Buntings, they are loud (always, always singing) and when two different males encroach on each other's territory sparks fly. This one was calling from a surprisingly low branch in the distance. I love the blue on green colour in this image.
True joy to see and photograph this Indigo Bunting male. He was a wonderful treat not for eyes only, but also his singing was amazing.
I had two of these beauties in the yard for several days last month. Then they disappeared. I wonder if this is a different one or if he's one of my previous visitors. I just love the color of his blue.
Have a wonderful Saturday and happy snapping.
Wild and free - for a Peaceful Blue Monday!
The Indigo Macaw is a critically endangered resident of interior northeastern Brazil. These macaws are metallic blue throughout with a slight green tinge and have yellow on the bare orbital ring and in a semi-circular patch at the base of its lower mandible. These beautiful birds inhabit caatinga thorn scrub vegetation with stands of licurí palm (Syagrus coronata) and pastures near sandstone cliffs which they use for nesting and roosting. Although this species had been known to science through traded birds, a wild population wasn't discovered until 1978. Since then, several smaller populations have been discovered, with a final population estimate of 140 birds being made in 1994. The Indigo Macaw may have never been common, but wide scale clearing or licurí palm stands and hunting for meat and for the pet trade have decimated populations of this bird. Drastic measures are needed to save this bird from extinction.
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Two adorable, juvenile indigo buntings came to visit the yard a few days before the bird count began. They have departed now but I was able to count them each day of the count and for a few days following.
It's always nice to be able to spend time in the yard during the migratory season. You never know who will stop by.