
It felt really good to be out on this beach in mid-February. My last visit to Fort Desoto Park was in June. I didn’t make it down here in the summer and then the hurricanes hit in September and October. The park had a lot of damage and was closed for several months. They opened back up in stages and the north beach area did not open until early February. To the naked eye it looked the same but there were small changes. The park rangers sifted through the sand on the main beach areas to clear all of the debris that had washed up on the beaches here. I was out at the beach just after the sun came up (I stopped at East Beach to get sunrise shots but more on those later).

It was low tide and I walked up to the end of Outback Key.

The sun coming up over seashells.

The back side of the lagoon had a lot of big clam shells that had washed up with the tide. The shells were empty and most were covered in barnacles. Wilson’s plovers were hiding among them. It’s a good place for them to nap because people wouldn’t be walking through those shells and stepping on them.

A piping plover walks by me with his orange legs.

All of the usual birds were on the beach including great blue herons, reddish egrets and a wintering ring-billed gull.
Almost to the northern end of the key. It was going to be a long walk back.

This guy got stranded in the low tide. It was going to be a while before that boat was getting out of that spot. The shorebirds were keeping him company.

I noticed that the grassy areas at the north tip were gone and found out that they didn’t wash away. They were covered with sand. In certain areas you could see how much more sand had stuck on the beach during the storms.



The little birds are quite camoflaged. But the heron taking off is the winner! #WordlessWednesday
Lovely photo of the sunrise over the seashells!
These are some really lovely photos but my favorite is definitely the sunrise over the shells. It looks like a very peaceful morning at the beach.
The Wilson’s Plovers are cute little birds. Poor dude with the boat learned that you have to pay attention to the tide.
Glad the beach opened again so you could check it out.
What a wonderful time you had at the beach! I had no idea that many clam sea shells would arrive at the shoreline which gave protection to the Wilson’s Plovers. Sand sure piled up in like a ridge or dune. Your Heron flying image was exceptional.
Lovely sunrise and birds photos.
Very peaceful.
Worth a Thousand Words
Beautiful pictures.
Beautiful.