Showing posts with label Ardea alba. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ardea alba. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2025

Great Egret Contortions

 

I was watching great egrets at the Jersey shore yesterday. They get their long legs, neck, and other parts into very complicated positions while hunting at the water's edge. Click to enlarge.

Like this.

And this.

And like when you try to suck in your stomach to look slender...

And when folded into a delicate twisted filigree.

Or just sitting in a tree showing off the breeding plumes.

Sunday, May 12, 2024

Happy Mother's Day

 

A patient great egret with three feisty chicks. Click to enlarge.
   
















































               



Sunday, May 14, 2023

Sunday, July 4, 2021

Happy 4th of July

 

No blog today, just some holiday-appropriate red, white, and blue local birds. Like this perky northern cardinal gathering a gift of grapes. Click to enlarge.

A great egret in a sultry summer pond.

And a handsome insouciant blue jay. Have a great holiday! Click to enlarge.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Happy Mother's Day!

 A crowded nest of great egrets, Ardea alba.
The kids are acting up. 
Click to enlarge. 


Sunday, January 6, 2019

Happy New Year!


 The 2018 Creature of the Year award goes to this great egret featured in my August 26th blog. Congratulations elegant egret! Click to enlarge. Click the date for the blog.
 
In the event that the egret is unable to fulfill its duties, these runner up squirrels from my Arpil 8th blog -- pictured here reacting to the announcement -- will step in. Happy New Year and good wishes to all for 2019.


Sunday, August 26, 2018

End of August

I've heard people say that August is the Sunday of summer. 
Here's to the last Sunday of August 2018 and summer's end!
I've posted below a few favorite photos from my August blogs of years past. 

A great Egret coming in for a landing, trailing toes. Click to enlarge.

A monarch butterfly. 

Rolling hills of Northern New Jersey in August. 

A laughing gull line up. 
Honey bee drinking a drop of water from a leaf. 
A carpenter bee on milkweed flowers. 
A bullfrog keeping an eye on me.
Snow geese overhead. 
A bumblebee at work. 
A great black wasp. 
A summer azure butterfly with striped antennae.
A deer watching me watch him. 
A baby northern cardinal with punk hairdo. 
An elegant monarch butterfly caterpillar climbing upward. 



Sunday, July 2, 2017

Happy Fourth of July!




No blog this week -- just a couple of red, white, and blue local birds: northern cardinal, great egret, and blue jay. Have a great holiday! Click to enlarge. 


Monday, May 12, 2014

Sunday, March 31, 2013

Spring at last...

Great egrets are here. Let the spring begin! 



I wrote a guest blog about northern cardinals for a blog called Tweets and Treefrogs; click here to see it

Sunday, August 26, 2012

White Egrets

Two white egrets are commonly seen in New York City: the snowy egret, Egretta thula, and the great egret, Ardea alba. Both are large white long-legged wading birds. Beginning birders confuse them, but a close look quickly separates them.

The snowy egret has yellow feet and a black bill. 
The great egret has black feet and a yellow bill. 
The question does not even come up if they are standing side by side because the great egret is about three feet tall, while the snowy is closer to two feet. Both kinds will fly south soon to their wintering grounds, so there is not much time left this year to compare white egrets.

The awkward elegance of egrets inspires poetry. Here is one of my favorites -- it is inscribed at the turtle pond in the Children's Zoo in Central Park.

Egrets by Judith Wright

Once as I travelled through a quiet evening, 
I saw a pool, jet-black and mirror-still. 
Beyond, the slender paperbarks stood crowding;
each on its own white image looked its fill, 
and nothing moved but thirty egrets wading - 
thirty egrets in a quiet evening. 

Once in a lifetime, lovely past believing, 
your lucky eyes may light on such a pool. 
As though for many years I had been waiting, 
I watched in silence till my heart was full
of clear dark water, and white trees unmoving, 
and, whiter yet, those thirty egrets wading. 

Ten great egrets and one snowy. 


Sunday, August 29, 2010

Wow -- that's a great egret!

The great egret, Ardea alba.

This bird has lots of names. It’s called the common egret, large egret, American egret, and white egret. And it's no surprise that many people have noticed the elegant and beautiful bird; it is more than three feet tall and has a wingspan over four feet.


The great egret is white with a yellow beak and black legs and feet – a combination of colors that distinguishes it from other herons and egrets you may encounter. It flies with its neck folded back, flapping deeply and slowly. 

It is often seen wading in shallow water or in mud, stalking its prey – frogs, snails, fish, insects, crayfish, and similar small things. This one often hunts in New York City's Central Park at the narrow end of The Lake just north of the Bank Rock Bridge. 

The great egret is found throughout the southern states and in estuaries and wetlands on both coasts during some part of the year, breeding mainly in the east but with exceptions. Some pairs breed in isolated spots and others in colonies. They build big nesting platforms of sticks, usually in trees, but also on the ground or in shrubs. Typically they lay three pale blue-green eggs. Males and females look the same. In breeding season they develop long plumes on their backs, which they erect and spread like big lacy fans.

The beauty of their plumes caused big trouble for them in the 19th and early 20th century. They were very popular decorations for ladies' hats. Wild bird hunting was unregulated then. Millions of egrets and other birds were slaughtered for their plumes and feathers. Common egrets were hunted to the edge of extinction. 

Public outcry saved them just in time and led to legislation that protects wild birds to this day. The Audubon Society was formed around then -- they incorporated in 1905; they led the cause, and later adopted the great egret as their symbol.

The great egret population has recovered and is doing well; its range in the United States is expanding.

Our taste in hat decorations has improved too.





There is more information about urban birds in my book,  Field Guide to Urban Wildlife, which will be published by Stackpole Books in spring 2011.