My new approach to wild animals is this: I will speak their names and wait for them to show up.
Without even trying, that is what has been happening.
In the last month, it happened with the stork, the spoonbill and the blue heron. Just a couple days ago, I was asking about a wood duck. From searches online, it seemed the little pied-billed grebe might be a juvenile wood duck. (I’m confident it is a grebe, though).
Well today, the wood duck showed up. I saw a bird fly by, and he looked foreign, somehow. I’m not sure how I know the flight profile of the birds around here, but I can usually tell who is who when they’re in flight. So, this black streak flashed up into a tree. Quite high up.
I grabbed the camera. What a wonderful splash of color!
It remained like that for some little while and then flew off. I suppose the backyard was just a way station. I am hoping it returns and goes into the water nearby.
Naturally, other dramas played out concurrently in the backyard animal kingdom. For starters, the grebe came back. No heron or egret to play/hunt with.



Then I found this muscovy hen sitting by herself on the lawn. They and the mallards are very often here, but they’re not usually alone, especially the female. She turned her head towards me.
I started taking these images because these two turtles tried to use the same log together yesterday and failed. The one on the bottom slid of and just kept circling the log, trying to find a way on.






My new camera arrived today. It is a D3300. I am not yet sure that I will be holding on to it, but I’ll see what I can learn from it, nevertheless.
- Aperture: ƒ/8
- Camera: Canon PowerShot SX510 HS
- Focal length: 129mm
- ISO: 400
- Shutter speed: 1/80s