

Trumpeters are magnificent.ThatWeirdKnifeGuy wrote: ↑Sun Apr 20, 2025 2:23 am Dreary bike ride through a marsh yesterday.
Pretty weak shot, but if you squint those white spots are trumpeter swans.
Then just some nesting geese.
Trumpeters are magnificent.ThatWeirdKnifeGuy wrote: ↑Sun Apr 20, 2025 2:23 am Dreary bike ride through a marsh yesterday.
Pretty weak shot, but if you squint those white spots are trumpeter swans.
Then just some nesting geese.
Nice photos, fellows.Mumbleypeg wrote: ↑Wed Apr 23, 2025 3:29 am Nice picture. Kingbirds sometimes hang around here into early summer, sometimes as late as June. Seems to me maybe they move on soon after the Scissortail Flycatchers (a Kingbird relative) arrive.
Ken
You can't put out that little teaser, and just drop it. Tell us about your time in Lima, followers of this thread won't mind a little departure from birds.
We lived there late 70 through 72. We were doing mission work. I guess actually we were growing up some. Both of us got hepatitis while there and after recovering moved back to USA. Lima is desert 🏜 and cold ocean, Andes mountains a short drive away. The railroad across them goes up over 14,000 feet. A different world. Never got to Machu Picchu.
That is quite a treat to see!
Good to see, you do a good job of attracting them. I have never had an Oriole in my yard, not one that I have seen anyway.
Nice pic. My wife, who doesn't care that much about birds, had the same experience last summer. One was on an old rotten stump in our backyard and she said she was about 15' away, called it "one of those great big Woodpeckers", and I can't even get within good picture range of one.
Great photo, Scott!
Those Bobolinks are cool to see, Ike. Bald Eagles are pretty common in my area, these days. But I never saw one until I was about thirty, in spite of being a birder. Now I would rather spot a Cooper's Hawk than an Eagle. The world has changed for sure.
treefarmer wrote: ↑Thu Apr 24, 2025 10:12 pmThat is quite a treat to see!![]()
I've not seen one working a tree on the ground.
I think we may have a nest west of our house, there seems to be a lot of racket coming from the same place at times, need to investigate a bit closer. There are several big dead pines in the woods, killed by Hurricane Michael that would that provide a perfect nest site.
How close did you get to that one, Scott?
Treefarmer