bruto
Penultimate Amazing
Today we went out for a while, mostly to photograph clouds and stuff, and to look for eagles. We did, in fact, spot several bald eagles, which like to fish off the edge of the ice on Lake Champlain. Nothing new there, but I don't think I'll ever stop being a little excited when I see one, having grown up during the years when they were so nearly extinct.
Otherwise, we saw some ducks, which I'm having a hard time identifying, owing to distance, and because they looked terribly like common eider ducks, which is a very unlikely thing to see in winter on Lake Champlain. As a result, I'm assuming my spotting and color identification was not very precise, and that they were common goldeneyes (bucephala clangula), which are somewhat similar at a distance, and more expected. Still, those things looked an awful lot like eider ducks. However, if they were, they were way far from home.
We also saw a flock of starlings, which should not be around here at this time of year, but there they were.
And we also saw some snow geese (chen caerulescens), which really ought to have flown further south by now, but there they were, swimming and flying around the Champlain bridge. Makes one almost start to wonder a little about global warming.....
As usual, a few red tailed hawks, and what was probably an osprey, but a bit far for absolute confirmation. And scads of seagulls, which I am too lazy to try to sort into species and subspecies. Probably herring gulls (larus argentatus), but I'll lump them under larus ubiquitus or perhaps rattus alatus!
Otherwise, we saw some ducks, which I'm having a hard time identifying, owing to distance, and because they looked terribly like common eider ducks, which is a very unlikely thing to see in winter on Lake Champlain. As a result, I'm assuming my spotting and color identification was not very precise, and that they were common goldeneyes (bucephala clangula), which are somewhat similar at a distance, and more expected. Still, those things looked an awful lot like eider ducks. However, if they were, they were way far from home.
We also saw a flock of starlings, which should not be around here at this time of year, but there they were.
And we also saw some snow geese (chen caerulescens), which really ought to have flown further south by now, but there they were, swimming and flying around the Champlain bridge. Makes one almost start to wonder a little about global warming.....
As usual, a few red tailed hawks, and what was probably an osprey, but a bit far for absolute confirmation. And scads of seagulls, which I am too lazy to try to sort into species and subspecies. Probably herring gulls (larus argentatus), but I'll lump them under larus ubiquitus or perhaps rattus alatus!
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