View allAll Photos Tagged preening
This Lesser Goldfinch was seen preening in the Herb Garden at the Los Angeles County Arboretum, Arcadia CA
It can't be easy using that long bill to reach one particular feather. Looks like it is using the other wing to keep balance.
American White Pelican (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos)
My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
A decade-old photo of some Trumper Swans. Wintering on a Norman, OK lake. Their heads are stained red indicating the lakes they spend summer on have iron deposits. Likely MN. Our beautiful world, pass it on.
I wish I were a hummingbird, flitting to and fro;
A tiny bird with lightning speed, how quickly I'd come and go.
I wish I were a hummingbird, traveling near and far;
Glittering in the sunlight, yet reaching for a star.
I wish I were a hummingbird, sipping nectar from a rose;
And wearing pretty feathers instead of these plain clothes.
I wish I were a hummingbird, soaring high and free;
If I could be a hummingbird, how happy I would be.
Member of the Flickr Bird Brigade
Activists for birds and wildlife
"First brought to North America by Shakespeare enthusiasts in the nineteenth century, European Starlings are now among the continent’s most numerous songbirds."- Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Siskiyou County, California
Captured while visiting 'Winter' the dolphin at Clearwater Marine Aquarium, Clearwater, Florida
Winter is a bottlenose dolphin, widely known for having a prosthetic tail. She is the subject of the book Dolphin Tale, and the 2011 film of the same name.
I actually had problems choosing these few to publish on Flickr. I haven't been active here for such a long time but I haven't stopped taking pictures.
It's rare that I get a decent bird shot (mostly secondary to my lack of patience, although a better telephoto lens would help as well), but I thought this showed how pretty even a common mallard can be.
Found this one that I took a few of years ago. It was taken with a Nikon D70 using an 80-300 G Series lens. The exif data is gone from computer abuse by myself, but knowing myself it was probably set around 5.6 so I could shoot at a higher shutter speed. I do know that this was my first trip to Wakodahatchie Wetlands and was the beginning of my adventure into this birding.
I shot this image from my car. The bird didn't mind the car so I shot through an open window. The Killdeer was so relaxed that he preened for a long time. He stopped every single time he heard the shutter.
Canon EOS 7D Mark II, EF300mmf/4L IS USM, EF1.4X Converter II, focal length 420mm, f/8, 1/1250, ISO 800