 |
Black Oystercatcher Foraging Below Cliff House |
What would nature in San Francisco be without birds?! For me, at least, it would mean far less variety and far less to motivate my photography even though I'm interested in pretty much all biodiversity, from insects and fungi, to flowers and wildlife, to seascapes and landscapes. Thankfully, I live in a city that has it all.
Also, I'm a "variety is the spice of life" kinda guy, whereas someone else might be more interested in going all-in on something more specific, like urban coyotes. Given that I only photograph what I encounter on my daily walks and bike rides, being into variety without having to be too picky about what constitutes a good subject is the only way to go.
 |
I'd just started my walk when this Nuttall's woodpecker flew across the street to land on a telephone pole. I got my camera out just as it flew back across the street to land on a strawberry madrone, which would have made a great photo backdrop if only the bird would have come out in the open. Instead it flew across the street yet again and landed in a sycamore tree. |
 |
Coming up from West Portal through Forest Hill I encountered this chestnut-backed chickadee in a bottlebrush eucalyptus just a few feet away and was surprised it didn't immediately fly away. |
 |
That flattened thing in its beak is a squashed mole crab. |
 |
Three snowy egrets for the price of one. |
 |
A black oystercatcher was prying for barnacles on the rocks below the Cliff House as the tide was going out this morning. Presumably this is the mate of the other one that was still sitting on its eggs out at Seal Rocks. |
 |
Black Oystercatcher on Seaweed |
 |
Sometimes you just want to take a break from wandering and tattling. |
 |
Bando's feathers have been kind of a mess for the last week or so, hopefully because he's molting into his adult plumage. |
 |
Although I still saw the red-necked phalarope yesterday at Blue Heron Lake, I did not see it today. The Canada goose that was on its fluffy nest has been gone the last few days, and there's virtually no sign that its nest was ever there. The pied-billed grebe chicks continue to stick close to home, although a second home nest has been constructed near the first one, but in a spot more concealed from my view. Meanwhile, I was surprised to see an adult black-crowned night heron, which I photographed through a tree with multiple trunks. |
 |
This is what happened when I stepped to the side to get a clear view. I watched where it flew to, though.... |
 |
"What, you again?" |
 |
"Well I guess I am beautiful, so go ahead and snap your picture." |
 |
Late March vs. Late May on the Sunset Parkway |
* * *