Wilderness areas are the places we go for fun!
This trip was also about taking some time to relax. I almost titled this post, "Relaxed Birding in Florida" because I did not keep written lists of the birds we saw and most of our travel was planned day-by-day. We did have certain areas of Florida we wanted to check out, and we also had friends we wanted to visit. We fitted birding in with those things by looking at eBird to find birding 'Hotspots' in the county we were in at the moment. And we sometimes just pulled in at "Florida Birding Trail" signs we saw along our way.
Now, I consider ANY type of birding to be "fun" but I realized when looking thru my photos that we also experienced quite a few "funny" birding moments on this trip. Everyone's idea of both "fun" and "funny" are unique to them (personally I'd rather walk with the wild alligators to see birds than go to a theme park but I might be a little strange).
For me, it's fun to go birding where there are palm trees and blue skies.
And, it's fun to go birding with my husband.
I feel a little safer with him between me and the alligators.
There are two alligators in the center of this photo. |
We watched a pair of pileated woodpeckers in one large old tree. We have pileated woodpeckers at home but not trees like that!
It was fun to see tons of blue-grey gnatcatchers and try to get a photo of one. They were everywhere we went, and they seemed to be constantly on the move.
Well, almost constantly.
We spent part of a day at Homosassa Springs State Park. While waiting for the boat ride into the Springs, a family standing near us was talking about seeing a snake in the water. It was no snake, as they soon found out. It was an anhinga, fishing in the water. They aren't nicknamed 'snakebird' for nothing. Imagine seeing only the wet neck and head of the bird in the next photo slicing thru the water!
Homosassa is fun because you get to see some birds close up.
We were amused by a lady's comment that it was so nice the bald eagles "could come and go as they pleased". It was nice that she thought so, but in reality, the eagles could not fly away, as they were injured birds whose lives had been saved by rescuers, but are no longer able to fly.
It was a chilly day when we were at Homosassa. I wish I had taken a video of these wood storks so you could see them in motion.
Their pink feet and legs were shivering from the cold. (It's a wonder they hadn't turned blue!)
Cold weather or not, this pair of great-blue herons knew it was time to start building their nest... that was fun to watch.
Babies are always fun, even an "Ugly Duckling" baby... this one is not a duck though, it's a brown pelican.
Its parents were taking good care of it.
Well, actually, they were spending most of their time preening and the baby was sleeping while we watched. But, it was fun to see anyway.
While we don't have pelicans to watch at home, I often enjoy watching red-tailed hawks. But I don't usually get to photograph them close up like this:
How's that for showing off a 'red-tail'? Maybe you'd like to see its head, too...
I obviously enjoy bird photography and I thought it would be fun to get a 'head shot' of a flamingo while we were in the park. It took awhile, but I was pretty happy with this shot.
One last photo from Homosassa Springs, before we move onto the wild side again. Lately I've been trying to study raptors... in particular, the differences between black vultures and turkey vultures. I want to be able to recognize each kind in case I see a black vulture at home (where it might be a 'county first'). The black vultures at Homosassa were very co-operative in helping me with this.
Did you get a good enough look yet? |
Paquette's Historical Farmall Museum |
which turned out to be ring-necked ducks. Nice!
Another fun thing that happened was at one of our impromptu stops at a Florida Birding Trail. We didn't know anything about the place, but we had extra time before we wanted to head to our motel for the night. It didn't look like much of a spot...
but it was the perfect habitat for red-headed woodpeckers... and we saw three of them there! That was pretty fun!
One of the more humorous birding moments came when we were visiting friends near The Villages. Strolling around Lake Sumter Landing, we saw a cormorant piloting a row boat with its mate riding along.
He obviously named his boat after her. I hope Shirley was enjoying the ride.
One of the last places we went birding was a 'hot spot' we found on eBird. The Hague Dairy in Alachua County, was just what it sounds like, a large experimental dairy run by the University of Florida.
Now, I love a dairy farm. Having grown up on one, I love everything about them-- including the smells. So, birding by the manure pit and around the Hague Dairy ponds was fun for me. The pit had attracted hundreds of yellow-rumped warblers. It was amazing... there were so many!
And they were so friendly!
I think that was the most fun thing that happened while we were birding in Florida!