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Days in Pictures

Seeds, needles, and faraway eagles

And weird ducks!

Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary

It was a pretty nice day! And as per usual this season, the light was low enough that it shone directly on the hummingbirds at the feeder behind the main office.

A female Anna's Hummingbird at a feeder, looking in my general direction. Her little partial gorget is very visible

Shiny shiny!

A female Mallard in the water, spreading her wings wide. The iridescent blue speculums are very visible

I’ll never say no to a Mallard glamour shot. Look at her soft brown eyes! The delicate texture of her head plumage! The little bits of seeds stuck to her bill!

Closeup of a female Mallard's head and chest

I love the colours here, and I bet she does too!

A female Mallard lying down, eyes closed, on a bed of yellow and brown fallen leaves. She is in the shade

Dramatic shadow!

A Song Sparrow in a bare bush, with a dramatic twig's shadow across its face

It’s unusual to see two adult Bald Eagles sitting companionably so close together! Well, two Bald Eagles of any age, really, they never struck me as the parental type. But maybe they’re a couple? I assume couples must tolerate each other’s presence even outside of breeding season.

Two Bald Eagles perched very close together on a fallen tree, off in the distance

“I’m going to a place nearby, gotta go.”

An adult Bald Eagle flying high against a blue sky

I never get tired of these ducks

A male Northern Pintail is swimming along

Nor these ones! Even if I always grumble and wonder why on Gawd’s green Earth their common species name refers to their not-always visible neck colour and not their intensely “look at this!” tri-tone bills.

Closeup of a male Ring-necked Duck on the water

Of course, wigeons are cute from any angle.

Closeup of a male American Wigeon's head, in profile, against grey water in the background

Okay, in addition to the silly pine needle accessories, I love what it shows of this Mallard’s head plumage. It looks like there are multiple layers (not that surprising, of course), with only the very top one sporting green iridescence. The next one down is more brownish / goldish?

Closeup of a male Mallard duck in the water. The surface has a bunch of dried pine needles on it, as does the back of his head

Behold its mighty feet!

An American Coot walking on grass with a bunch of fallen leaves

Glamour, take 2.

Closeup of a female Mallard's head and chest, seen in profile

A chickadee doing what they do best: looking cute and eating

A Black-capped Chickadee is standing on a branch, with a seed in its beak

A Golden-crowned Sparrow doing what they do best: being yellow on top.

A very round Golden-crowned Sparrow is standing on a branch and looking down

Piper Spit

We keep seeing this gang of cormorants way in the distance, hanging out and fanning their wings.Thinking about it, it may be the best spot for them: closer to the spit and they’d have to deal with crows and seagulls and whatnot. Further away and the water would be too deep. I guess there are multiple spots with the characteristics, but I guessl they adopted this one and will keep on using it, come hell or high water.

A group of Double-crested Cormorants are standing in shallow water in the distance, airing their wings. There are dying lilypads and yellow-brown reeds in the far background

Not quite mirror smooth, but I’ll take it!

Looking West along Burnaby Lake. Mostly overcast sky reflected in the still water. One Mallard duck is swimming in the foreground

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