0 favorites     0 comments    98 visits

1/160 f/4.0 3.8 mm ISO 200

Canon PowerShot SX60 HS

3.8-247.0 mm

EXIF - See more details

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...


Keywords

tree
Anne Elliott
© All Rights Reserved
birdwatchers
birders
bird blind
SX60
Canon SX60
© Anne Elliott 2019
South Texas
Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge
overlooking Willow Lakes
annkelliott
birding
Texas
people
plants
outdoor
scenery
fence
wooden
photographers
birdwatching
Canon
United States
U.S.A.
26 March 2019


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

98 visits


Day 8, bird blind, Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, Texas

Day 8, bird blind, Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, Texas
Yet another day of Flickr not working properly. Will be so glad when they fix the map issue, for a start! Uploading this morning was fast.

As you can tell, I have finally managed to get back to sorting and editing a few more (15 + 11) photos taken on our 13-day birding trip to South Texas, 19-31 March 2019. Apart from yesterday, the last photos from this holiday were posted om 20 May, three weeks ago. These photos look so drab in comparison to the colourful local birds I have been posting recently. Actually, I think Day 8 and Day 9 are going to be similar, but then Day 10 will have more colourful Texas birds.

Despite the lack of close, colourful birds, Day 8 was an interesting day, spent at the Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge in South Texas. The forest was so different from anything I had ever seen, with Spanish Moss hanging from all the branches. It was quite a strange feeling to walk the trails,

"Established in 1943 for the protection of migratory birds, Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge happens to be positioned along an east-west and north-south juncture of two major migratory routes for many species of birds. It is also at the northern-most point for many species whose range extends south into Central and South America. The refuge is right in the middle of all this biological diversity, which is what makes this 2,088 acre parcel the ‘jewel of the National Wildlife Refuge System.’ Though small in size, Santa Ana offers visitors an opportunity to see birds, butterflies and many other species not found anywhere else in the United States beyond deep South Texas." From link below.

www.fws.gov/refuge/Santa_Ana/map.html

Comments

Sign-in to write a comment.