Category: Ducks

Highlights of 2016, part 5–more ducks– N to end

Almost done with ducks and their cousins, but this is a very long post!

You may have noticed that I’ve skipped over geese and swans, which I’ll cover separately….

n-shoveler-range-cornell

First up is a duck that I had enormous difficulty getting close to at The Coast, with one notable exception at Piper Spit, Burnaby. Up here, however, especially at Robert Lake, despite its tiny viewing area, I’ve been able to do much better with Northern Shovelers. I was also able to observe them in a more natural setting in Michaelbrook Marsh.

While predominantly a western duck during breeding season, the NSHO can be seen in other parts of Canada and North America in other seasons.

“Perhaps the most outwardly distinctive of the dabbling ducks, the Northern Shoveler inhabits wetlands across much of North America. Its elongated, spoon-shaped bill has comblike projections along its edges, which filter out food from the water.” Cornell Lab of Ornithology

northern-shovelers-2
Northern Shoveler pair at Robert Lake, May 2016. Click to enlarge.

 

Northern Shoveller
Magnificent in spring! Click to enlarge.

The bill of the Northern Shoveler is about 6.5 cm (2.5 inches) long. The bill has has about 110 fine projections (called lamellae) along the edges, for straining food from water.

Northern Shoveler pairs are monogamous, and remain together longer than pairs of other dabbling duck species.

When flushed off the nest, a female Northern Shoveler often defecates on her eggs, apparently to deter predators.

The oldest recorded Northern Shoveler was a male, and at least 16 years, 7 months old when he was found in Nevada. He had been banded in California.” (Cornell)

NSHOs in mid May. To enlarge the images above, just click on them….

A month after the photos posted above were taken, the NSHO has evolved into this guy below:

Northern Shoveler – mid June
Our drake in mid June. Click to enlarge in a new tab.

Turning away from ducks for a moment, I must give some space to one of the smaller members of our local menagerie, the Pied-billed Grebe.

pied-billed-grebe-range-cornellPart bird, part submarine, the Pied-billed Grebe is common across much of North America. These small brown birds have unusually thick bills that turn silver and black in summer. These expert divers inhabit sluggish rivers, freshwater marshes, lakes, and estuaries. They use their chunky bills to kill and eat large crustaceans along with a great variety of fish, amphibians, insects, and other invertebrates. Rarely seen in flight and often hidden amid vegetation, Pied-billed Grebes announce their presence with loud, far-reaching calls.

In our neighbourhood, as with so many of the water birds, we see PBGRs in Belmont Pond and Thomson Marsh  just before breeding becomes intense. I wish they’d nest where we can observe the chicks, but they don’t. Part of the fun of this avocation, however, is the ongoing effort to learn more about the birds when the heat is turned up….

Pied-billed Grebe
(Podilymbus podiceps) large Belmont Pond, Kelowna, BC. Curiously, this one, an autumn juvenile, does not have the usual “pied” stripe on the bill….
Pied-billed Grebe
(Podilymbus podiceps) small Belmont Pond, Kelowna, BC. Smaller space, different light!

Part bird, part submarine, the Pied-billed Grebe is common across much of North America. These small brown birds have unusually thick bills that turn silver and black in summer. These expert divers inhabit sluggish rivers, freshwater marshes, lakes, and estuaries. They use their chunky bills to kill and eat large crustaceans along with a great variety of fish, amphibians, insects, and other invertebrates. Rarely seen in flight and often hidden amid vegetation, Pied-billed Grebes announce their presence with loud, far-reaching calls.” (Cornell)

Pied-billed Grebe under duress - 2

We see other grebes as well, but so far I haven’t built up a very strong library of the Eared, Horned, Red-necked, and Western varieties. Another project for 2017!

Click to enlarge these record shot images:

And one shot of a Horned Grebe in winter plumage:

Where lake meets sky....
Horned Grebe, (Podiceps auritus) Okanagan Lake near Rotary Marshes, Kellowna. BC.

Two of my favourite spring ducks fall into the “R” category: Redheads and Ruddies.

Ruddy Ducks have a much greater presence in the West; Redheads are seen in more areas of North America. Each is a striking addition to any spring pond!

While 2016 did not provide opportunities as great as the previous two springs, it did not totally disappoint. We travel to Birdie Lake at Predator Ridge Resort south of Vernon each spring where we have been quite lucky with these species. No Ruddy in Belmont Pond this year, but we’re keeping our fingers crossed for a drop-in  this year. Surprise us, 2017, just as 2016 did when, for one day, we had Redheads in Thomson Marsh!

The image below was taken through some tall cattails on a cloudy afternoon. While it does not rank as a great image, it marks a noteworthy moment with its diversity of pond mates all crowded onto one heavy log! A most unusual find, unlikely to be replicated….

Redheads —special appearance
In Canada, we love diversity!

Click to enlarge images.

Ruddy Ducks, at least the drakes in breeding season are also known as Bluebills:

Another project to work on this spring!

From Cornell’s Lab of Ornithology come these two tidbits:

The bright colors and odd behavior of male Ruddy Ducks drew attention from early naturalists, though they didn’t pull any punches. One 1926 account states, “Its intimate habits, its stupidity, its curious nesting customs and ludicrous courtship performance place it in a niche by itself…. Everything about this bird is interesting to the naturalist, but almost nothing about it is interesting to the sportsman.” That’s an account from a different era, and one that I would question today. One can only imagine how the writer might describe human behaviour ninety years after he wrote that piece!

Ruddy Ducks are very aggressive toward each other and toward other species, especially during the breeding season. They are even known to chase rabbits feeding on the shore.”

Skipping Snow Geese and Swans, we move to another genus of ducks, Anas —teals comprising three species commonly found in BC. In Part 1 of this series, we met the American Green-winged Teal (and its Eurasian cousin the Green-winged or Common) Teal. In this concluding Part, we’ll look at two of the relatives: the Blue-winged and the Cinnamon. The latter is truly a western waterfowl with an amazing north-south range; the Blue-winged, however, is common across Canada. Here in the Okanagan Valley, I see more CITEs than BWTEs, at least in our two and a half years.

Teal males of all three species are striking. For me, the Cinnamon is most arresting,

teal-cinnamon
Solo Cinnamon drake….

and especially beautiful to capture in flight with its combination of reddish brown, teal blue, and green. Not the best flight shot you’ll see, but my best so far. Another one to work on in 2017.

Cinnamon Teal in flight
Cinnamon Teal moving to a preferred spot at Robert Lake near Kelowna. Click to enlarge.

In 2015, I got my best CITE shots close to home. Last year, however, these ducks presented very well near the tiny viewing area at Robert Lake. This is my favourite shot by far.

Click to enlarge in a new tab.

teals-youre-so-vain-probly-think-this-photos-about-ya
“You’re so vain; you prob’ly think this shot is about you….”

I was very pleased the day that I found CITEs and a BWTE together in Teal Corner in Thomson Marsh. I had never seen a BWTE in this marsh before, and to have the two species together for comparison was a great bonus.

Teals - Cinnamon, Blue-winged
Cinnamon Teal pair in the background; Blue-Winged in front. Click to enlarge.
Blue-winged Teal
Blue-winged Teal surprise! Photographed through the cattails….

Wondering how I know which drake above the female on the right is mated to?

Good question. For starters, I watched the CITEs work together; the BWTE was clearly the visitor, and I’d seen him alone in the location before (left). Click to enlarge.

Cornell’s Lab of Ornithology online also provides this guideline: “Female and immature Cinnamon Teal are notoriously difficult to distinguish from Blue-winged Teal. Cinnamon Teal are always larger-billed than Blue-winged. They also have a warmer-toned face, whereas Blue-winged Teal has colder, gray tones and a bolder facial pattern. Green-winged Teal has a slimmer bill and more boxy head. Their overall body color on females is darker brown, with a darker stripe through the eye and darker cap. Green-winged Teal in any plumage lack the pale blue upperwing coverts of Blue-winged Teal, Cinnamon Teal and Northern Shoveler.” (Cornell)

Here’s a shot of a BWTE and a NSHO sharing space at Robert Lake (Click to enlarge in new tab):

Blue-winged Teal and Northern Shoveller
Blue-winged Teal and Northern Shoveler in a “twofer shot.”

And finally, we reach the end of our ducks for 2016 with my all-time favourite, one we are blessed to enjoy both at The Coast and here in Okanagan Valley, the duck whose photo graced the beginning of this five-part series (hey, these guys deserve a fanfare, too!)~

The Wood Duck!

Wood Ducks Belmont small - 1
Wood Duck pair in Belmont Pond where we enjoyed their presence for several weeks in the Spring of 2016. Sadly, they didn’t breed here, but that may change in 2017 if the newly installed WODU nest boxes impress them sufficiently….

Click to enlarge images.

Wood Duck drake on grass - 2.jpg
Wood Duck drake high in grass. (I said ‘in’, not ‘on’….)

And we’ll say goodbye for this post with this triptych from Piper Spit in Burnaby, BC.

For geese and swans, see Part 6.

Highlights of 2016, part 4– more ducks— G to M

If you were looking in Part 3 for ducks or water fowl with “C” in their first names, perhaps Cinnamon Teal or Common Mergansers, you didn’t find them except as a note. You’ll find the latter in this part, along with Gadwalls, Hooded Mergansers, the Common Loon, and, of course, Mallards (on which I did a piece earlier). For  Horned (and other) Grebes, check part 5.

Gadwall male - 09a
Gadwall drake, Thomson Marsh, early spring. Click to enlarge in a new tab.

Gadwall. Unusual name. Just like the word ‘unusual with its three ‘u’s. I’ve heard them called Gladwells, Gadwells, Godwills, and plain ducks. But to me, they’re a treat, and we have lots of ’em, although I always wonder how that happens. Really. I find Gadwalls are among the most devoted of mates and yet I’ve never seen, to my knowledge, a hatch of Gadwall ducklings! I’ve watched them copulate, so that can’t be the problem. But where do those wee ones go?

gadwall-range-map-du
Click to enlarge in new tab.

According to Ducks Unlimited ,” Gadwall[s] breed near seasonal and semi-permanent wetlands, mainly in the grasslands and mixed Prairie regions of the United States and Canada. Substantial numbers also breed in wetland habitats of the Great Basin. Gadwall tend to begin breeding later than most ducks. Female gadwalls nest in fields and meadows, and on islands and dikes in wetlands, and lay an average of 7-12 eggs.”

In addition, “The North American gadwall population remained stable through the 1970s and early 1980s, while populations of other waterfowl species generally declined. Since the late 1980s, the gadwall population has increased to record levels, with the most recent estimates nearing 3 million, due to improved wetland habitat conditions.

Gadwalls - 3
“Okay, maybe this is the angle he’s lookin’ for. Smile, dammit!”….. “I’m smilin’; I’m smilin’!”

Many of you in the northeastern US and Atlantic Canada, western Ontario and the high Arctic, and most parts of BC may be unfamiliar with this subtly plumaged (until you really look closely) and almost silent species. We used to have a single pair in our urban pond in New Westminster that I admired for their devotion. But it wasn’t until we moved to the Interior that I really came to appreciate them, especially in early spring and late autumn, when light angles illuminate them best. And, now that I think about it, I don’t see them much in summer, likely because that’s when they’re rearing their young in more remote locations…. Live and learn (OK, and speculate!).

Click on any of the photos in the set below to enlarge them.
To return to this screen, click the small x in the top right corner of the enlarged window.

gadwall-breeding-pop-du
From Ducks Unlimited: http://www.ducks.org/hunting/waterfowl-id/gadwall

The North American gadwall population remained stable through the 1970s and early 1980s, while populations of other waterfowl species generally declined. Since the late 1980s, the gadwall population has increased to record levels, with the most recent estimates nearing 3 million, due to improved wetland habitat conditions.

In spring and autumn, we occasionally see drakes displaying their hidden colours, above left, when they stretch. In Thomson Marsh, in spring, pairs can be rather shy. In the shot above, top right, the drake and his mate had been swimming north along the brook, keeping an eye out for any snooping paparazzi who might be tracking their whereabouts. The drake, in the lead, decided to move ahead as quickly as possible, but the duck held back, unbeknownst to him. When he finally realized that he and she were now on opposite sides of me, he showed a little consternation as he tried to decide if it was safe to swim back to her. (He could have flown, but chose not to.) Slowly, deliberately, he swam back in her direction, giving me a number of great looks, including the one at the beginning of this  Gadwall section….

A much more colourful bird that I’m very pleased makes itself widely available in Okanagan Valley ponds and streams is the Hooded Merganser. Like its Common Merganser cousin, it shows up in Belmont Pond, only steps from home, and in Mission Creek in spring and autumn. Several breed in the area like the family that gave me some of my best images in 2015 at Michaelbrook Marsh.

All of the photos of HOME drakes were taken in Belmont Pond, very close, appropriately, to home. They can be found in many other locations in the Valley, however.

Click on any of the photos in the set below to enlarge them. 
To return to this screen, click the small x in the top right corner of the enlarged window.

Mergansers of all species can be problematic to photograph. Some of my Flickr friends envy how approachable Hoodies and COMEs are here. I appreciate their cooperation but still find capturing them to my satisfaction an ongoing challenge. But that’s the fun of it all, isn’t it— the ongoing drive for improvement.

These are two of my favourite Hoodie shots of 2016, both of drakes, but with different lighting….

Hooded Merganser (Belmont) - 12a
Hoodie drake in special light, Belmont Pond. Click to enlarge in new tab.
Hooded Merganser (Belmont) - 09a
Less dramatic, perhaps, but special in its own way…. Click to enlarge in new tab.

Click on any of the photos in the set below to enlarge them. To return to this screen, click the small x in the top right corner of the enlarged window. Before you do that, however, what do you mean you already did? I wanted you to note that three of these photos show a female Hooded Merganser, and one does not. It shows a juvenile male. Now which one is the juvie? And I don’t mean all those little ones, especially the one who’s mounting his guard, the Western Painted Turtle because he thinks it’s a pony….

If she has an all black bill, she’s not a she, he’s a he….

The Common Merganser is a much larger bird. While there are some similarities among the female cousins, we’d never mistake a COME for a HOME. That’s even more true for males. I had few chances to observe COME drakes at the Coast, but only because I didn’t like driving to look for them. Here, they show up in the spring as a pair—in Thomson Marsh or Mission Creek. At this stage, the drake looks a responsible mate. But after breeding, and even more, after the eggs hatch, he abandons his mate and his family.

And, in our neighbourhood, at least ini 2016, he became a regular visitor who spent his summer vacation in Belmont Pond, visiting with other ducks and mergansers, and providing wonderful photo opps for local photogs:

common-merganser-belmont-pond
I love the colour and finery of these magnificent males, even if they are lousy dads! Click to enlarge.
Common Merganser female
Female Common Merganser in Thomson Marsh in Spring, waiting for her mate to arrive.

Some interactions were hilarious, at least to me…. Click photos to enlarge.

Poor guy! He’s gets it from everybody who thinks they’re the boss!

BC, including the Okanagan, is also home to the much rarer Red-breasted Merganser. Sadly, I didn’t see any this past year. One was reported on Okanagan Lake, but I couldn’t verify the find. Maybe this year….

Got so carried away with Mergansers that I nearly forgot the Common Loon, which I decided to put into this category. 2016 did not provide me with opportunities like those at 108 Resort in 2014 and 2015, and we did not get back up there this year. Of course we have Loons in the Okanagan-Southern Interior Plateau region, but I didn’t make them a target in 2016. Another species to pay more attention to in 2017. I’ve got some ideas; we’ll see if they materialize.

Click images to enlarge.

Besides its dazzling appearance, the COLO is renowned for its vocalizations. On a big lake like Okanagan L., we don’t get to enjoy that as much as we do in smaller Cariboo Lakes or those in the Kane Valley. I took their calls and chatter too much for granted in the 15 years when I heard them calling in the evenings and sometimes in the dark when it was time for humans to sleep. Now I long for those sounds again….

Well, the “M category” would not be complete without a mention of the Mallard, on which I’ve already posted a set of flight shots. I’m hoping to do a special feature on this species later in the spring. For this post, besides the Mallard above, here’s a couple of shots without comment: click on the photos to enlarge them.

For all the remaining ducks, see Part 5….

Highlights of 2016, part 3—ducks, coots, and goldeneyes: A to C*

Juvenile Wood Duck ed outside Photos
“The Darkling Wood Duck” (juvenile drake), Piper Spit, Burnaby Lake, BC. Click to enlarge in a new tab.

*For teals other than American Green-winged, look under “T.” Similarly, Common Mergansers are found with their Hooded cousins under “M.”

Part 3 looks at some of my favourite water birds shots from 2016 that are not covered in part 2.

We are especially fortunate to have a great selection of species, ducks: both dabbler and diving , as well as two (and on rare occasions three) species of mergansers, and an assortment of others mentioned in the heading….

Late winter, spring and autumn are the prime seasons for ducks here. While there are plenty around in summer, that’s when we  focus more on songbirds and Ospreys.

Most of the photos are taken in the Kelowna area, many close to home. Some, however, like the juvie Wood Duck above, were taken in the summer at Piper Spit on Burnaby Lake in the Vancouver area on our trips to pick up and deliver grandkids….

Teal - American Green-winged drake
(Anas crecca carolinensis) Thomson Marsh, Kelowna, BC. Folks at The Coast shooting at places like Piper Spit in Burnaby may have no idea what a challenge it is up here to get this close. This fella had attached himself to a small flock of Mallards slightly less fearful of people than he…. ………Click photo for enlarged view in new tab.

As with other parts of this review of 2016, the presentation will be roughly in alphabetical order. And that means starting with the American Green-winged Teal (Anas crecca carolinensis) . Few of us bother with the “American” designation, but as we occasionally see the Green-winged Teal (aka Common Teal, Anas crecca) more commonly found in Europe and Asia, I’m using the AGTE designation here. At Burnaby Spit, in fall, winter, and spring, AGTEs forage very close to the boardwalk are easily photographed up close. Up here, however, these tiny ducks have to fight for their place in the ecosystem and are generally very difficult to get close to—at least in the places where I see them. During our colder, snowier than usual winter 2016-17, I was able to find them in Thomson Brook and with great stealth to get a few shots, but not unobstructed. Getting shots at a distance is not so difficult, but I’m not able or interested in spending thousands of dollars on high powered lenses to overcome this issue…. More teals near the end of Part 3….

“The waterborne American Coot is one good reminder that not everything that floats is a duck. A close look at a coot—that small head, those scrawny legs—reveals a different kind of bird entirely. Their dark bodies and white faces are common sights in nearly any open water across the continent, and they often mix with ducks. But they’re closer relatives of the gangly Sandhill Crane and the nearly invisible rails than of Mallards or teal….

American Coot Rotary - 3
American Coot in Belmont Pond, Kelowna, BC. Always difficult to balance tones! Click to enlarge.

You’ll find coots eating aquatic plants on almost any body of water. When swimming they look like small ducks (and often dive), but on land they look more chickenlike, walking rather than waddling. An awkward and often clumsy flier, the American Coot requires long running takeoffs to get airborne.” (Cornell Lab of Ornithology)

We see rafts of coots in the winter in Okanagan Lake. In spring, however, they move into the brooks and ponds where they raise their young. I have seen them breeding in Belmont Pond, so close to our home, but sadly, the birds moved to a different location to hatch and rear the “cootlings.” (Incidentally there doesn’t seem to be an approved designation for coot chicks; one suggestion  I saw—’cootie‘ just isn’t acceptable!! In England, related birds are sometimes called “moorchicks.”) I have photos of the chicks at such a distance they’re not good enough to post. Definitely a challenge for 2017!

Another fascinating “American bird” for me is the American Wigeon. (I used to see their Eurasian cousins in Japan, and EUWI are showing up in increasing numbers in BC these days. Have yet to capture one in the Interior, so will look hard this year.) AMWIs, up here, I thought at first, were very difficult to approach. 2016, however, changed that opinion. Spring in Thomson Marsh seems to be the best time to observe and shoot them (with a camera, of course!) They do stop over in the fall and a few stick around near Okanagan Lake through the winter. In spring, however, they return to marshes and are great fun to watch…. Only the male sports the bald pate and green racing stripe through the eye.

A duck that stands out despite its size is the very active and, in the right light, colourful Bufflehead. I didn’t get a lot of shots of this species in 2016. (Check more recent posts for evidence of my good fortune in 2017.) In the set below, click any photo to enlarge ’em all.

“We may be small, but we’re show stoppers!!”

There are two species of goldeneyes to watch for: the Common Goldeneye and the one below, Barrow’s Goldeneye. While the females of both species are quite similar though fairly easily distinguished if one can get a clear image of their bills, the males are striking different. Of the two, the Barrow’s, a northwestern-corner-of-the-continent duck to begin with, is rarer even out here, and, in my humble opinion, the more attractive duck with his splatter of white stripes and his purplish head with his quarter moon or teardrop white crescent stripe, take your pick.

Incidentally, the Barrow’s in the name honours Sir John Barrow (1764–1848) who, according to Wikipedia was a long time secretary in the British Admiralty, where he”… was a great promoter of Arctic voyages of discovery, including those of John Ross, William Edward Parry, James Clark Ross and John Franklin. The Barrow Strait in the Canadian Arctic as well as Point Barrow and the city of Barrow in Alaska are named after him.” I used to think the duck was named for one of these far north locations, but apparently, we can reach such a conclusion only indirectly (written my best civilservantese).

barrows-goldeneye-pair
I spotted this pair at Robert Lake quite far away, but was able to sneak up and get this medium range image using the technique described below. Click to enlarge.

In my experience, BAGOs prefer wider stretches of water—ponds and lakes—that enable them to stay farther from my camera. Being divers, however, they need to come into the shallows to forage, so they can be stalked sometimes. Take your time, move when they’re really hungry and submerged, but know that once they spot you, there’s a good chance they’ll give up food for privacy. A fellow photographer in Penticton, however, has managed some wonderful closeups of Barrow’s in that town’s wonderful canal. Find the right pond, I guess! I think a Barrow’s side trip (to Penticton, not Barrow’s Strait!) is in the works when I start my south Okanagan region spring birding….

Common Goldeneyes by comparison are truly common. Still, they’re a pretty duck in winter when they visit Mission Creek to forage on the bottom of the stream.

Cornell agrees: “The male Common Goldeneye adds a bright note to winter days with its radiant amber eye, glistening green-black head, and crisp black-and-white body and wings. The female has a chocolate brown head with the same bright eye that gives this species its name. These distinctively shaped, large-headed ducks dive for their food, eating mostly aquatic invertebrates and fish. They nest in tree cavities in the boreal forest of Canada and Alaska; look for them on large rivers, lakes, and Atlantic, Pacific, and Gulf coasts in winter…. 

Females are best distinguished by head and bill shape (above); also, female Barrow’s usually have more yellow on the bill than female Common.

female-cogo-and-bago
Comparison of female bills of Common Goldeneye and Barrow’s Goldeneye.

In our very cold December 2016, Mission Creek froze over in the lower reaches, but fortunately some stretches of mid-stream, ironically, stayed open.COGOs were able to forage, but their numbers were much reduced from the past two winters.

Common Goldeneye drake
COGO in the very cold Mission Creek, December 2016. Click to enlarge.

in the very mild 2015-16 winter, I was very much surprised  to discover a solitary female COGO in the mix of ducks that wintered in Thomson Marsh sometime in mid February. Later that month, this same duck, I believe, moved over to Belmont Pond where she waited patiently, it seemed, for two weeks. Because she was a bit of an explorer, an individualist, I named her Dora. Eventually, she was joined by a single COGO drake that I christened Melvin. They stayed in Belmont Pond for about three days with an assortment of other species I had not seen here the year before, then by mid-March, they were gone, and I never saw them again.

Dora and Melvin
Melvin and Dora in Belmont Pond
common-goldeneye-drake-melvin
Melvin, Dora’s prince whom she waited for for weeks! You can tell he’s royalty by that purplish tinge added to the green in his crown….

For Gadwalls, Hooded and Common Merganser, Common Loons, and Mallards, check Part 4….

Duck springs to flight

(Flight of Spring Ducks?)

Okay, it’s a bit much to mix the wonderful sonnet below, or at least part of it, with photographs of a Mallard drake taking flight, but has “a bit much” ever been much of a restraint for me?

From John G. Magee’s wonderful sonnet, High Flight, 1941….
“Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of Earth
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I’ve climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
of sun-split clouds, — and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of….
(For the rest of this inspiring piece, and more on the 19 year old RCAF pilot from the USA who wrote it not long before his death in combat, see this link:
Magee High Flight

And now for the “Mallard takes to the skies” images….
Click photos to enlarge them; click the x (top right of images) to close a set.
You can enlarge a single photo even more, and in a new tab, by
finding and clicking on the photo data box bottom left of each image.

 

 

 

 

These 11 images represent my first success in trying to capture this action. I was very fortunate with the light, and am surprised that the shutter speed was adequate to capture the action. What I’m happiest about, with this hand-held photography, is that I was able to keep the duck in the middle of each frame during the two seconds (according to my camera’s date/timer) that it took to shoot this content….

Here are all 11 photos in one tiled group: