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Warbler on Pine tree branch. Taken at Weeks Bay Estuary in Fairhope, Alabama in mid November. Canon T6i EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM

Weeks Bay Pitcher plant bog in Baldwin County Alabama.

 

www.weeksbay.org/about_us.htm

Weeks Bay area pitcher plant bog south of Fairhope, AL

Weeks Bay Pitcher Plant Bog

Heron flying over the water. this was pretty overexposed, but made some adjustments and left the water the way it was shot. Canon T6i EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM

Should probably be called "Blue Heron point!"

Downy woodpecker with head turned. Taken at Weeks Bay Estuary in Fairhope, Alabama in mid November. Canon T6i EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM

Thanks Kelli, that's what it is! Oxalis!

 

www.flickr.com/photos/kelliwilliams/

 

Please view large

With one bloom open...

 

Same flower as below...

Amazing what you capture, when you least expect it!

Right before shooting the super moon. At Pelican Point w/ my friends Brody and Sherry. Baldwin County, AL

Taken at Weeks Bay Pitcher Bog...

 

Loved the little bug, not sure what it is?

Weeks Bay Pitcher plant bog in Baldwin County Alabama.

 

www.weeksbay.org/about_us.htm

Juniper Pitcher Plant Bog, Weeks Bay Foundation, Weeks Bay National Estaurine Research Reserve, Fairhope Alabama 2887

I was so excited to actually SEE one of these, much less get the above shot!! It was a good day:)

One of my fav photos of Wendell Davis Smith doing what he liked to do

 

A brown pelican roosting atop a post in Weeks Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve in Alabama. Habitats in this reserve support numerous rare and endangered species including the eastern indigo snake and the Alabama red-bellied turtle. Credit: Weeks Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve

Beautiful Green Heron feeds on the bank of Fish River.

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Nikon D3100

 

A lone pitcher plant at Weeks Bay Pitcher Plant Bog near Magnolia Springs, Alabama

Shortleaf Sneezeweed (Helenium brevifolium), a member of the sunflower family which grows in bogs and other wet habitats, welcomes spring at Weeks Bay Pitcher Plant Bog in Alabama.

Weeks Bay Pitcher Plant Bog, AL

Smooth cordgrass (Spartina alterniflora) and black needlerush (Juncus roemerianus) along the shores of Weeks Bay, AL. This area is adjacent to the main boat ramp--the scarping is likely caused by boat wakes. This is a common cause of erosion for coastal wetlands.

The supermoon lights up Weeks Bay. A boy shines a flashlight on a cast net thrown by his dad.

water and grasslands at the Weeks Bay Reserve in Alabama

Taken at Weeks Bay!

 

Best viewed large

Weeks Bay, Alabama

View of Weeks Bay from the Fish River.

 

Photo Credit: Nicole | Picasa

Weeks Bay, Alabama

Double crested cormorant takes off on an early misty morning on Weeks Bay

Weeks Bay Pitcher Plant Bog, AL

A pitcher plant bog at the Weeks Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve in Baldwin County, Alabama

The exaggerated shore-slope shows the zonation pattern of Juncus and Spartina. Juncus is capable of outcompeting Spartina but it cannot survive in the low intertidal.

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