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Spoonie Tuesday

Blufftonian

Well-Known Member
I think it was Spoonie Tuesday here in South Carolina today…

sd_dsc8960.jpeg
  • NIKON CORPORATION - NIKON D500
  • 500.0 mm f/5.6
  • 500.0 mm
  • ƒ/11
  • 1/1000 sec
  • Other
  • Manual exposure
  • ISO 200
sd_dsc8943.jpeg
  • NIKON CORPORATION - NIKON D500
  • 500.0 mm f/5.6
  • 500.0 mm
  • ƒ/11
  • 1/800 sec
  • Other
  • Manual exposure
  • ISO 360
sd_dsc8933.jpeg
  • NIKON CORPORATION - NIKON D500
  • 500.0 mm f/5.6
  • 500.0 mm
  • ƒ/8
  • 1/800 sec
  • Other
  • Manual exposure
  • ISO 160
sd_dsc8927.jpeg
  • NIKON CORPORATION - NIKON D500
  • 500.0 mm f/5.6
  • 500.0 mm
  • ƒ/8
  • 1/800 sec
  • Other
  • Manual exposure
  • ISO 280

Roseate Spoobills (and a Wood Stork in the last photo).
 
I agree, and your light was great. Brilliant captures.

In your last pic: What happened to the bird second left? Looking blue
 
Great to see and leaves our white royal spoonbills look drab :) Very nicely taken.

Danny.
 
I agree, and your light was great. Brilliant captures.

In your last pic: What happened to the bird second left? Looking blue
Thank you. He’s just in the shade. It was a hot (95F) late morning here when I took the photos and the group of birds were just starting to get under the shade of a tree.
 
Great to see and leaves our white royal spoonbills look drab :) Very nicely taken.

Danny.
They are spectacular birds but unlike your royals these birds don’t get any long plumes on their heads in breeding plumage. In fact, breeding adults have bald heads and, as you’d expect, the colour of the plumage is a function of both food sources and the individual’s age. Immature birds - there are several in the above photos - are paler and have fully feathered heads.
 
It's what I thought but I had to check with you. I get it a lot in my pictures where some areas look not quite part of the scene. Photos are funny that they show you different to what you 'thought you seen'.

Thanks Blufftonian.:daumenhoch-smilie:
 
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