Out at Circle B Bar Reserve in early March, I was greeted by a tricolored heron and a kingfisher, both flying by.
Green herons are common along the trail but I can’t help but take more pictures of them.
I saw this great blue heron high up in a tree doing a mating dance. They look straight up and bob up and down. It looks like he, or she, was sitting on a nest already. I guess she was ready to start a family.
Here comes another one. Maybe a looking for a mate? She did not want any part of him as she screamed at him.
He flew around in a circle and still came back to land on the same tree. She chased him off so maybe that wasn’t her boyfriend.
I stopped by Lake Morton near downtown Lakeland on the way home. This male black necked swan had already started a family. I saw him walking over to the nest and his mate, a mute swan, left. He checked the eggs out and then sat on them while she went out for a walk (or to look for a snack). The black neck swan had a mate, also a black necked, for several years before she was hit by a car in early 2020. They were the only pair so now the lone male has taken a mute swan as a mate so it will be interesting to see how those babies turn out.
A blue winged teal taking a nap.
I’ve been told the gray swans here are offspring of mute swans and black swans that had paired up. There are several on the lake.
An anhinga posing for me.
The baby black swans are growing up fast. They looked so cute cuddling together.
Your photos never disappoint and always are full of beauty and interest.
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