La Jolla Pelicans and Gulls

California Brown Pelican in breeding plumage.
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California Brown Pelican in breeding plumage.

This is the final batch of images from my trip to La Jolla this spring. (I have previous posted landscape images, color and monochrome seal photos, and pelican and plant abstracts from the same trip). It has taken me a pathetically long time to edit my images from my trip.  I came back with thousands of frames.  Making matters worse, many of the frames are quite similar with regard to subject matter and composition.  More bluntly: I made a lot of portraits of California Brown Pelicans (Pelecanus occidentalis californicus).  Something about the combination of interesting birds — with their distinctive breeding plumage, nice light, a distant background that I could blur into nothingness with a long lens, and an ugly dirt-and-guano foreground screamed “portrait.”  Multiply by five days, and you get the idea.  But, I did make some very nice portraits. The pelicans have wonderful sense of character.

California Brown Pelican
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California Brown Pelican

La Jolla is not just about pelican portraits, of course.  The funky pelicans lend themselves to abstract and semi-abstract images.

Preening California Brown Pelican Abstract
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Preening California Brown Pelican Abstract

California Brown Pelican preening
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California Brown Pelican preening

The flight shooting was great as well.  I got a chance to try out my new 70-200 f/4 lens (a medium telephoto lens).  It is deadly for pelicans in flight, and it was a pleasure shooting with a lens that has so much more depth of field than my typical 500mm f/4.

California Brown Pelican with rainbow
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California Brown Pelican with rainbow

The gulls were great as well. Here are a couple of my favorites, including images of Heermann’s Gull (Larus heermanni), American Herring Gull (Larus smithsonianus) and Western Gull (Larus occidentalis).

Western Gull
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Western Gull

Heermann's Gull
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Heermann's Gull

I couldn’t resist a couple of images of the Double-crested cormorants (Phalacrocorax auritus).  They exhibit a marvelous tension between the humorous (crests) and the severe or sinister (beak and eyes).

Double-crested Cormorant
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Double-crested Cormorant

Here is a gallery of all of my shorebird images from the trip, plus a daisy image to boot (if you’re viewing this from the RSS feed, this will look strange. Click through to see the gallery in its proper form).  As you browse, notice how even among similar-seaming pelican portraits, there are subtle differences in the bird’s plumage and beak coloration:

Looked for Eagles, Settled for Gulls

Ring-billed Gull
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Ring-billed Gull

Recently I traveled Farmington Bay Waterfowl Management Area in Utah to photograph bald eagles. The refuge poisons and collects carp for the eagles to eat, and in most years the photography is spectacular. This year, not so much. Too much open water meant that the eagles had lots of food sources and were widely dispersed. There were, however, many Ring-billed Gulls (Larus delawarensis) and Herring Gulls (Larus argentatus), so I photographed them instead.

Juvenile Herring Gull
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Juvenile Herring Gull

Ring-billed Gull
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Ring-billed Gull

There are basically two things that you can “say” about gulls. Either that they’re graceful (and occasionally comical) white birds, or that they are carrion and garbage eaters:

Herring Gull feeding on a dead carp
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Herring Gull feeding on a dead carp

Finally, I did see a number of raptors, including Harriers and one of my favorites, American Kestrels (Falco sparverius). Unfortunately, this Kestrel seemed to prefer this post to a more attractive perch.

Perched female American Kestrel
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Perched female American Kestrel