Tag Archives: American coot (Fulica americana)

Let’s get this party started

First, some observations and notes regarding the new camera.

It’s an 8 megapixel camera as opposed to the S50 being 5 megapixel.  That means I can take larger photos with higher image density, and that in turn means I can more easily crop images to focus on the subject—without decreasing the quality of the photograph.

This camera has a 12x optical zoom.  I’m now able to get high quality pictures of subjects at distance.

The S5 IS has significantly improved white balance.  This provides for deeper, richer, and more realistic color.

Similarly, it handles focus with more granular control.  Part of this stems from the increased optical zoom, but another part of it comes from its improved handling of targets.  Like I did, you’ll find subjects clearly delineated by sharp focus while background information becomes a supporting palette.

I forgot to change the ISO setting from automatic to manual.  I never take photos at anything higher than ISO 100, even in the dark, so I rarely have the significant image noise generated by higher ISO settings.  Regrettably, the camera selected some of those higher settings yesterday which resulted in some of the most anticipated images turning out poorly.  Nevertheless, several are retrievable.  Oh, and I’ve since updated the ISO settings to keep that from happening in the future.  Hindsight and all. . .

Finally, there’s much to learn before I’ll feel comfortable with this new gadget, although having the same manufacturer reduces my learning curve since a great deal of the functionality is already familiar to me.  Still, I quite capably fouled up several shots while trying to learn.  Oh well.

But rather than bore you any longer with senseless gibberish regarding some of the photos I took yesterday, I figure it’s best to jump right in.  Here is a small sampling of the pictures captured yesterday.  While you’ll recognize several of the lake’s normal inhabitants and winter visitors, this time around you’re likely to see them in a different light.  I know I did.

A pair of American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) and a double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) preening after their morning baths

A pair of American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos)
and a double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) preening
after their morning baths

More American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) preening in the morning sun

More American white pelicans (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos)
preening in the morning sun

An American coot (Fulica americana) milling about in winter grass looking for breakfast

An American coot (Fulica americana) milling about
in winter grass looking for breakfast

A white Chinese goose (a.k.a. swan goose; Anser cygnoides) watching me closely (note the stunning blue eye)

A male white Chinese goose (a.k.a. swan goose; Anser cygnoides)
watching me closely (note the stunning blue eye)

A female domestic greylag goose (Anser anser) facing me directly (again, note the stunning blue eyes)

A female domestic greylag goose (Anser anser)
facing me directly (again, note the stunning blue eyes)

After all that preening, and after the pelicans left, this double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) turned around and enjoyed a relaxing stretch

After all that preening, and after the pelicans left,
this double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus) turned
around and enjoyed a relaxing stretch

Despite the unnecessarily high ISO settings, these ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) made for great subjects as they flew around the pier

Despite the unnecessarily high ISO settings, these
ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) made for great subjects
as they flew around the pier

More ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) in flight

More ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) in flight

The larger versions of these photos offer far more than these reduced sizes can hope to achieve.  I hope you at least take a look at some of them.

[note this represents only a fraction of the pictures taken yesterday, and even that fails to include the photos I’ve taken of The Kids; you can expect to see more in the future; likewise, I can expect to overwhelm myself with a plethora of images as I experiment, learn, and bury myself in the joys of photography with this very capable camera]

Time to eat

During a walk on March 15 of this year, I stumbled upon a recently offered selection of food proffered to the local wildlife at the lake.  Morning sun painted the world in bright hues as I decided to sit and watch a diverse selection of fowl enjoy some breakfast.  Each came and went at their leisure while grabbing a little of this and a little of that—whatever seemed most appealing.  With bread and various kinds of seed and grain having been tossed about by human visitors, there seemed to be a wide selection from which to choose.

Various birds grabbing a bite to eat (176_7626)
Various birds grabbing a bite to eat (176_7630)
Various birds grabbing a bite to eat (176_7633)
Various birds grabbing a bite to eat (176_7634)
Various birds grabbing a bite to eat (176_7635)
Various birds grabbing a bite to eat (176_7644)

[photos include a brown Chinese goose (a.k.a. swan goose, Anser cygnoides), great-tailed grackles (Quiscalus mexicanus), wood ducks (Aix sponsa), American coots (Fulica americana), ring-billed gulls (Larus delawarensis) and rock doves (Columba livia)]

Patience and the wood duck

I’ve been trying to photograph some wood ducks (Aix sponsa) for quite some time.  Plenty of them live at the lake.  It’s simply been an issue of timing.  When I’ve seen them, it’s usually been at a distance.  So I’ve approached as quietly as possible only to have them slowly move away at the same time.  The end result?  No pictures.

Until last week.

My usual morning walk had been uneventful for the most part.  I’d seen plenty of wildlife as I enjoyed the fruit of spring’s approach, and I’d even seen a handful of critters I’d not seen before.  Nevertheless, I roamed somewhat aimlessly and tried to lose myself in the moment.

Walking along the banks of one of the larger creeks, I finally arrived at the confluence where these sources feed the lake.  That’s where I spied a pair of wood ducks swimming lazily out from behind the brush and into the open water.

Unfortunately, they were too far away for me to get a respectable picture.  So I followed.  In hindsight, I should have stood my ground.

Their little legs pushed them in a wide arc away from the creeks and along the shore.  I raced on foot near the water’s edge trying to get ahead of them—perhaps even to get out to my favorite pier where they might pass close enough for me to capture and image or two.

But they beat me to it, passed under it before I got there, and were showing me their backs as I faced into the sun trying to take at least one shot.  That’s when I noticed their meandering continued taking them closer to the shore.

So I headed off the pier in another attempt to intercept them.

By the time I was on land, they had already come ashore and were looping back around the pier.  It seemed they were making one large circle covering both land and sea.

A pair of wood ducks (Aix sponsa) (176_7618)

With the female leading the way, her white mascara glinting in the early sun, the male spoke so softly that I struggled to hear him.  His voice is surprisingly hushed, a whisper compared to most of his cousins.  And it seemed terribly obvious to me that she was in charge, at least when it came to whatever mission they were on, for he brought up the rear as she rushed headlong toward…well, toward whatever she was after.

Two wood ducks (Aix sponsa) and an American coot (Fulica americana) (176_7620)

Some American coots (Fulica americana) likewise milled about the area.  Ms. Duck didn’t let them interfere with her activities, and Mr. Duck simply kept up and kept talking.

I walked alongside them at a distance that kept them from seeing me as a threat.  In fact, I think the female’s single-mindedness and the male’s rushing to keep up meant I had little to worry about in that regard.  The excursion afforded me a good opportunity to keep snapping photos while I enjoyed the sight of these beautiful creatures.

A male wood duck (Aix sponsa) (176_7623)

There was a moment when I thought I might have scared them off.  You see, we were walking back in the direction where I had first seen them and given chase.  I couldn’t contain my own laughter as we walked by the end of the pier where I had run breathlessly in hot pursuit.  Seeing it pass by in the opposite direction immediately made me wonder why I hadn’t just stood my ground and waited for them to come back to me.  Ah, hindsight…

Male and female wood ducks (Aix sponsa) (176_7639)

Once they reached the other side of the pier in a position so near to where the chase started that I could see my own fresh footprints, they completed their loop and waddled back into the shallows.  I stood and watched as they carried their small bodies into the water and began swimming toward the center of the lake.

Wood ducks (Aix sponsa) swimming out toward open water (176_7613)

Okay, perhaps wood ducks aren’t the smartest folks.  I still can’t for the life of me imagine what purpose was served by their loop around the pier.  They wound up where they started—in the water.  I blame her since she was obviously in charge of the expedition.  If his constant yammering indicates anything, he also blamed her for the meaningless jaunt.

The majestic approach

I’ve often wondered about the “swan geese” moniker given to Chinese geese (Anser cygnoides).  Sure, they’re as large as swans and have long necks they sometimes hold in positions reminiscent of swans, but I didn’t particularly feel either of those traits warranted a nickname linking these raucous birds to their distant cousins who quite dissimilarly are full of grace and quite a bit less noise.  I realize they are domesticated swan geese, but that still leaves me wondering about the name.

And then I captured these photos of both the brown and white varieties.  The question was answered.

Watching these large waterfowl as they glided across the surface of the water, their heads held with courtly elegance, their necks long and slender, and their wings pushed up by an upwardly held tail, suddenly reminded me of the same postures and visuals often seen with swans.  Although no one would ever mistake one of these geese for a swan (unless seen from quite a distance), I realized while watching them approach the shore that they indeed deserved that very cognomen.

(175_7592)

Even the American coots (Fulica americana) seemed to offer genteel deference as the geese made their way toward land quite near where I stood.  Then again, maybe they were just trying to get out of the way of this much larger and quite forbidding gaggle that seemed intent on mowing over anything that got in their way.  That definitely is another similarity to swans (who, if you didn’t know, can be quite mean and aggressive, a trait contrary to their beauty).

Nevertheless, the geese came ashore only a few yards (a few meters) from where I stood taking photographs.  Until they were out of the water, one easily could see how swanlike they were.

(175_7593)

Let’s not forget they are geese, however.  Before they reached my position, I captured this video showing just how rowdy, boisterous, and shrill they are.  The honking echoed across the entire lake and sometimes threatened to reach earsplitting levels.  Just listen to them in this brief film.


There’s something else in that video I want you to take note of as well.  Underlying the sounds of the geese and other birds is an almost mournful noise, one in close proximity to the camera.  It runs throughout the video and repeats constantly and at almost clock-like intervals.

That sound is a coot standing in the shallows.  I had never heard a coot make that noise before.  I’ve heard the other sound they make, the one that reminds me of a throaty groan (you can hear it a few times in the first five seconds, and then there’s one right at five seconds that’s much louder and clearer).

I watched the coot making that sorrowful sound to see if perhaps it was hurt or sick.  After several minutes, I concluded it was acting like the rest of them who were loitering about the area where land and water joined together.  Despite its kith and kin making what I thought to be normal coot noises, this one continued its crying for quite a while.  Eventually, though, it reverted to the expected calling as it and the other coots made their way to land for a free meal provided by some very nice folks bearing the gift of breakfast.