Ask
virtually any wildlife photographer and they’ll say that mid-day is
absolutely the worst time to try for photographs of most wildlife, be
it mammals or birds. But, when you have a planned get-together for
coffee with friends in mid-morning and an early evening meeting,
mid-day is all you have. And so at 2:00pm I donned camo clothing and
set up at the edge of the marsh.
The
marsh has open water, dense stands of cattails, a scattering of
willow, boxelder and silver maple trees in the drier spots, areas
dominated by emergent shrubs like buttonbush and a border of shrubs.
The great variety of vegetation supports a wide variety of wildlife.
There
I sat awaiting the arrival of whatever wildlife happened along. The
first critter to appear was a muskrat that swam the edge of the open
water and then repeated the circuit – a male looking for a mate
perhaps –
Meanwhile
an eastern phoebe used a nearby willow as a launch-pad from which to
sally forth to snatch insects from the air –
The
first duck to make an appearance was a male green winged teal that
landed on the far side of the open water –
While
I was watching the teal, there was a commotion off to the side.
There, two large snapping turtles were busy propagating the species –
Ducks
flew over, including a pair of mallards –
And
several male wood ducks landed in the open water, then proceeded to
enter the area of emergent shrubs –
A
tundra swan far down the marsh came closer and stood in a shallow
spot in the open water – it preened a bit, stretched and proceeded
to fall asleep –
I
was very late for lunch so I packed up and walked along the edge of the
marsh on the way back to the car. There in the open water was a pair
of northern pintails, the male is often described as the handsomest of ducks –
They
tipped up to feed, showing why they’re called pintails –
It
had been a good mid-day in the marsh.