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I saw someone else's post of a Hummingbird and I just had to go back a little while when it was warm. Here a female Ruby-throated Hummingbird is taking a little rest on a Salvia in my backyard.
Atlantic County, New Jersey
American Avocets are rare to uncommon migrants here in New Jersey, usually appearing in August or September. However, this small flock appeared at the Forsythe NWR in July. I tired several times to get a group shot, but they were usually way out in the water feeding or blocked from view by marsh grass. This was the one chance I had to photograph them but they were resting, eyes closed and bills tucked into their chests. There were also Short-billed Dowitchers feeding all around them. And so I waited and waited, sweating in the summer heat and being attacked by biting flies and mosquitos. All to get this one shot!
A Red-shank (Tringa totanus) was found resting on its one leg with a typical posture of the shank species in its natural habitat. I love the green Bokeh transformation in the backdrop and the blurring gradient of the depth of field which gives a glimpse of everything surrounding. The bird really stands out against such ambience. It was taking a short rest in between its foraging. Pics was taken from Purbasthali, Burdwan, West Bengal, India.
European Wasp (Vespula germanica)
It had been flying around me when it decided to take a rest on an Ivy leaf.
This Four-spotted Pennant takes a breather on a twig.
Taken 22 August 2016 at the Chesapeake Bay Environmental Center, Maryland
This is the first swallow I met this spring. Swallows are back and they are now building their nests with mud and hay. This one is taking a rest, from its work. Notice the beak (its tool for the constructions) covered with mud.
A big thank you to Bill Correll for giving me the coordinates to this place that rests deep within the Beezley Hills of Grant County, Washington. This place is impossible to see from any roads. I thought it was a very neat old house, settled in a very precarious place. What surprised me even more was that it had a nice foundation which would have been a real buggar to get concrete down there to mix. Most places this old are just built right on the dirt. I'm glad I made it out there, even in the snow. It was quite the walk, 2 miles in and 2 miles back out!
Why birds stand on one leg , I am still trying to work that one out - yes one leg gets a rest , but then the other one gets double the work and has to work harder keeping balance !!
I am also not sure what they are doing with their feather sticking out every which way .
If they do overbalance the landing will be soft - but wet !!
From Ranganathittu bird sanctuary, Mandya, Karnataka
Pls view in light box- press L or click on the image
Ranganathittu lies just beyond Tipu's Srirangapatna and is, basically, a group of islands in the middle of river Cauvery.
One's first impression of the place is lush thickets of bamboo and bird sound — chirruping, twittering, and cooing... a wonderful experience for a city-dweller.
My Photoblog- My Third Eye...!
A Pika rests in the warm morning sun high up above the tree line. Making its home in the jumble of rocks and boulders in the alpine region of the rocky mountains, safety is always a quick dash away under some crevice and away from danger.
Mount Evans, Colorado.
Male leopard (Panthera pardus) known locally as the Flat Rock Male, resting in the grass after consuming a very large helping of impala.
MalaMala Game Reserve, South Africa
Conservation status: Vulnerable
Thank you for your views and comments. They are all greatly appreciated.
Take off your shoes, sit on the sand for a while, take a deep breath and smile. There is still a long way to go...