
Colaptes auratus


Colaptes auratus





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Thank you Tina for featuring my “Spring” offering when you introduced this week’s theme. The seasons go round and round, and are quite definitive in the Pacific Northwest!











Thanks to Amy for this week’s Lens-Artists weekly photo challenge! https://shareandconnect.wordpress.com/2020/07/04/summer/



Sometimes I take a photo, like the one below, of a subject (Bufflehead duck) and I’m disappointed when the featured subject is unclear.
Then, when I look at the same photograph as a composition, I am pleasantly surprised!
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Northern Harriers course low over the marshes and meadows frequently, yet in three years of attempts, my efforts to get a good photo were always blurry or just of the sky or marsh with no bird to be seen! Capturing this shot of an adult male carrying a twig to its nest, was very gratifying.
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For a few days a female House Finch appeared at our living room window, looking very much like she wanted to build her nest right there!
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Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology hosts Project FeederWatch, a Citizen Science program from November thru April (https://feederwatch.org). Creighton and I have participated for the past 12 seasons. This winter we were visited by a bird we’d never seen before.


When I entered my weekly report, Cornell experts questioned if I had the right identification. The cautious bird, a Snow Bunting (Plectrophenax nivalis), came to our feeders for about a month – such a lovely surprise!
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In May, a young American black bear rambled across the meadow while Jello and I watched from the living room (https://lindylecoq.com/2020/05/19/sunday-surprise/). A week or so later, as we walked back from the beach, I was startled to hear Jello discharge a guttural growl. Looking toward her, I saw a black bear emerge from the dune grass and cross the trail right in front of us. Jello’s hackles were up and she took off after the bear. I yelled my one word command for all similar occasions: STOP! …and she did!
I wish I could say I’m surprised that my country is leading the world in novel corona virus infections. Sadly, I’m not surprised – I’m embarrassed, disgusted and impatient to replace the current administration. We can do better.
Thank you Leya for sending me looking for happy surprises – or at least surprises with a happy ending!
https://lagottocattleya.wordpress.com/2020/06/27/lens-artists-photo-challenge-103-surprise/

House Finch – Carpodacus mexicanus

Mallard Duck – Anas platyrhynchos

Canada Goose – Branta canadensis and Mallards

Caspian Tern – Sterna caspia

Bald Eagle – Haliaeeetus leucocephalus
Quiet moments for me happen when what I see is in harmony with itself and fills me with a sense of internal peace.

Being a true introvert, I relax when I have the opportunity to quiet my brain and focus on the beauty of nature.
Seeing wild birds in their natural habitat, essentially oblivious to me, is an extra special delight.


Because she is photogenic and a true expert, I have many portraits of Jello engaged in her own quiet moments.


Thank you Patti, for suggesting we feature times and places that bring us peace.