Roseate Spoonbill that was standing alone, just poking around the water.
There were several not all that far but this one just hung out in one spot.
It was good for me since how often do you get this type of closeup!
Roseate Spoonbill that was standing alone, just poking around the water.
There were several not all that far but this one just hung out in one spot.
It was good for me since how often do you get this type of closeup!
A Tricolored Heron photographed during low tide in a canal. These are natural canals that run though marshes and along side dikes.
The water can get deep here and even though it’s it’s brackish Alligators are all around here. Dolphins have come up these canals and Boar move through the reeds, neither are that common right here though.
This is mostly the home of the large wading birds.
This is a sample of the great blue skies we get along the coast here, South Carolina Lowcountry. At times it can be so blue as to appear fake, made in Photoshop (and I have been asked).
Having the clouds is critical with sky like this. Everything can be lost, or over powered, by blue.
Not this morning. Added to clouds was a big Wood Stock in a lazy pass.
Can’t beat that combination.
A different, dramatic, perspective on the Egret.
I had no plans of publishing this here, it was used as the banner heading of another web site.
I did like the reed reflections and motion from the bird swimming along. Anyway, a White Pelican.
This simple image captures the beauty of fall in the Lowcountry.
Soft rusts and brown shades, reflections on water, and of course our wildlife.
We don’t have the red Maple leaves of New England.
Still, they don’t have the pink Spoonbills of the south.
Fair trade.
Egret flying in low over the marsh grasses.