Since I can't go to the oasis until tomorrow, I resolved to enjoy migration in Alpine today. About the time a group of birders (Naturalist Journeys) arrived, I had been talking to birder Bill Sain in the alley between our house and the habitat (Johnson Ponds) when I spied the elusive Wood Thrush that I had been seeking for the past week.* I was determined to photograph it, so I took a barely diagnostic shot of it in the shadows. Then, while trying to get everyone on it, it flew away. I knew the odds of relocating it were slim, but I pursued it across the street and down an alley to where some of the birders said it had landed in a tree. Here's the group in hot pursuit. I relocated it in the grass beneath the bare tree that's peaking out behind the white building.
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*On April 15 and/or 16 my husband saw it foraging under the grape arbor near where he was sitting on the patio. I was at the oasis, but my son was working in the workshop there. Hugh got my son to come look but Lee didn't have a camera on him. He later described it to me and I knew what it was. Then on the 18th, Jon McIntyre visited and got a photo of it. So I've been watching for it ever since. Yesterday, while photographing a Common Yellowthroat, I thought I saw it in my peripheral vision but couldn't locate it.
1 comment:
I think all your pictures are awesome. You are leaving a valuable historical record for generations to come.
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