Winged Wednesday 5/28/2025 Odd Waders

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
This week’s theme is wide open with wings welcome, whether they’re soaring, fluttering, or simply striking a pose. What winged wonders have caught your eye lately? Birds, bugs, bats, butterflies, show us your favorites in flight or at rest!
Wading birds are the long-legged pros of shallow waters, hunting fish, insects, and amphibians in wetlands. This week, I’m diving into some of the most unusual wading birds I’ve photographed, creatures with striking looks and quirky habits. Next week, get ready for herons, the stealthy hunters of the marsh.

White ibis-03669-Edit.jpg

White Ibis (Florida): With its curved orange bill and snowy white plumage, the White Ibis has a striking presence in southern wetlands. Its long, down-curved bill is equipped with specialized sensory organs called Herbst corpuscles, letting it detect prey like insects and crustaceans by touch beneath the mud and shallow water. But these birds aren’t always peaceful. In this photo, a juvenile snaps back after an adult’s warning nip.

American bittern-03586-Edit.jpg

Seeing an American Bittern in flight is a rare reward, this secretive marsh bird is usually hidden among reeds, relying on camouflage and stillness. But when airborne, its broad wings and slow, steady beats show a quiet strength. One fascinating detail: the bittern’s eyes are set low in the sockets and angled downward, helping it spot prey below when its head is level. To see the horizon, the bittern must lift its bill skyward, a behavior that makes its classic “sky-gazing” pose both iconic and functional. (North Dakota)

American avocet-00138-Edit.jpg

Avocets (Arizona): In their vibrant breeding plumage, avocets are delicate and graceful waders. Their long legs and uniquely upturned bills sweep side to side as they feed, skimming for tiny prey. This elegant feeding style, paired with warm rusty tones and bold patterns, makes avocets beautifully odd and a favorite subject for photographers.

Black-necked stilt-06876-new.jpg

Black-necked Stilts are among the most striking waders, with impossibly long pink legs and bold black-and-white plumage. Their delicate build and precise, deliberate movements give them an almost balletic grace. Feeding in shallow water, they pick delicately at the surface for insects and small aquatic life. Stilts are one of the most delicate and elegant oddities among wading birds.

Roseate Spoonbill-01883-Edit.jpg

Roseate Spoonbills (Florida): With their vivid pink plumage and spoon-shaped bills, Roseate Spoonbills are unmistakable. Their color is partly inherited—their bodies are built to process pigments—but the richness of that pink depends on their diet, especially the carotenoids in the crustaceans they eat. Their feeding is just as distinctive: wading through shallow water, they sweep their open bills side to side, snapping shut when they sense movement. Equal parts flamboyant and efficient, spoonbills are among the most unusual and captivating waders in North America.

Jabiru-06864-Edit.jpg

The Jabiru is a giant among wading birds, with a massive black bill, vivid red throat pouch, and commanding presence. Found in Central and South America, it feeds by slowly sweeping its open bill through shallow water, snapping it shut when it senses prey. Its size, striking looks, and unusual technique make it one of the oddest and most memorable waders. (Brazil)

Red-legged Seriemas-03269-Edit.jpg

Red-legged seriema — The Wader That Isn't (Brazil)
At first glance, the Red-legged Seriema could be mistaken for a wading bird. Its long legs, upright stance, and graceful stride appear to be related to herons or egrets. But looks can be deceiving. Seriema is not a bird of marshes and wetlands. It’s a grassland specialist, found striding across open savannas and scrublands of South America.

This resemblance is a beautiful example of convergent evolution: different species, shaped by different environments, evolving similar physical traits to suit their lifestyles. Where wading birds use their long legs to hunt in shallow water, the Seriema uses its legs to run down prey on dry land, often stomping lizards or insects before swallowing them whole. Its expressive crest, sharp bill, and unmistakable call make it a charismatic oddball—more kin to cranes than to egrets, but an eye-catching lesson in how form and function don’t always point to the same habitat. It’s a wader in appearance, but a grasslander by nature.
 
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Ken Rennie

Well-Known Member
We have been staying with my daughter in Manchester for a few days and I spent a couple at the coast, mostly for seascapes but I couldn't resist trying to photograph the gulls with my Tamron 28-200. Probably a herring gull but am open to suggestions. Ken
_DSC4337-DxO_DeepPRIME XD2s-1 copy.jpg
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
This week’s theme is wide open with wings welcome, whether they’re soaring, fluttering, or simply striking a pose. What winged wonders have caught your eye lately? Birds, bugs, bats, butterflies, show us your favorites in flight or at rest!
Wading birds are the long-legged pros of shallow waters, hunting fish, insects, and amphibians in wetlands. This week, I’m diving into some of the most unusual wading birds I’ve photographed, creatures with striking looks and quirky habits. Next week, get ready for herons, the stealthy hunters of the marsh.

View attachment 81756
White Ibis (Florida): With its curved orange bill and snowy white plumage, the White Ibis has a striking presence in southern wetlands. Its long, down-curved bill is equipped with specialized sensory organs called Herbst corpuscles, letting it detect prey like insects and crustaceans by touch beneath the mud and shallow water. But these birds aren’t always peaceful. In this photo, a juvenile snaps back after an adult’s warning nip.

View attachment 81751
Seeing an American Bittern in flight is a rare reward, this secretive marsh bird is usually hidden among reeds, relying on camouflage and stillness. But when airborne, its broad wings and slow, steady beats show a quiet strength. One fascinating detail: the bittern’s eyes are set low in the sockets and angled downward, helping it spot prey below when its head is level. To see the horizon, the bittern must lift its bill skyward, a behavior that makes its classic “sky-gazing” pose both iconic and functional. (North Dakota)

View attachment 81750
Avocets (Arizona): In their vibrant breeding plumage, avocets are delicate and graceful waders. Their long legs and uniquely upturned bills sweep side to side as they feed, skimming for tiny prey. This elegant feeding style, paired with warm rusty tones and bold patterns, makes avocets beautifully odd and a favorite subject for photographers.

View attachment 81759
Black-necked Stilts are among the most striking waders, with impossibly long pink legs and bold black-and-white plumage. Their delicate build and precise, deliberate movements give them an almost balletic grace. Feeding in shallow water, they pick delicately at the surface for insects and small aquatic life. Stilts are one of the most delicate and elegant oddities among wading birds.

View attachment 81755
Roseate Spoonbills (Florida): With their vivid pink plumage and spoon-shaped bills, Roseate Spoonbills are unmistakable. Their color is partly inherited—their bodies are built to process pigments—but the richness of that pink depends on their diet, especially the carotenoids in the crustaceans they eat. Their feeding is just as distinctive: wading through shallow water, they sweep their open bills side to side, snapping shut when they sense movement. Equal parts flamboyant and efficient, spoonbills are among the most unusual and captivating waders in North America.

View attachment 81753
The Jabiru is a giant among wading birds, with a massive black bill, vivid red throat pouch, and commanding presence. Found in Central and South America, it feeds by slowly sweeping its open bill through shallow water, snapping it shut when it senses prey. Its size, striking looks, and unusual technique make it one of the oddest and most memorable waders. (Brazil)

View attachment 81760
Red-legged seriema — The Wader That Isn't (Brazil)
At first glance, the Red-legged Seriema could be mistaken for a wading bird. Its long legs, upright stance, and graceful stride appear to be related to herons or egrets. But looks can be deceiving. Seriema is not a bird of marshes and wetlands. It’s a grassland specialist, found striding across open savannas and scrublands of South America.

This resemblance is a beautiful example of convergent evolution: different species, shaped by different environments, evolving similar physical traits to suit their lifestyles. Where wading birds use their long legs to hunt in shallow water, the Seriema uses its legs to run down prey on dry land, often stomping lizards or insects before swallowing them whole. Its expressive crest, sharp bill, and unmistakable call make it a charismatic oddball—more kin to cranes than to egrets, but an eye-catching lesson in how form and function don’t always point to the same habitat. It’s a wader in appearance, but a grasslander by nature.
Another set of beauties Eric. I enjoyed your explanations of the different species behaviour. That Avocet shot is really spectacular.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
I didn't get out to look for birds this week but did catch a few blowflies hanging out in my compost that I turned. Must be some wonderful odours if you are a fly bent on feeding in decaying organic matter. The Raspberry bush had some creatures as well.

BugGuide informed me that male Greenbottle flies have larger eyes which come much closer together at the top of the head.
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Here is a female with a wider gap between the eyes.
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One Bluebottle fly was hanging out with the Greenbottles. The Bluebottle fliy the interesting scientific name of Calliphora vomitoria.
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This is some type of Lygus bug I believe. It was happily sitting on a Raspberry stem and didn't immediately fly off as I approached it with the camera.
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Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
I didn't get out to look for birds this week but did catch a few blowflies hanging out in my compost that I turned. Must be some wonderful odours if you are a fly bent on feeding in decaying organic matter. The Raspberry bush had some creatures as well.

BugGuide informed me that male Greenbottle flies have larger eyes which come much closer together at the top of the head.
View attachment 81765

Here is a female with a wider gap between the eyes.
View attachment 81766

One Bluebottle fly was hanging out with the Greenbottles. The Bluebottle fliy the interesting scientific name of Calliphora vomitoria.
View attachment 81767

This is some type of Lygus bug I believe. It was happily sitting on a Raspberry stem and didn't immediately fly off as I approached it with the camera.
View attachment 81768
You have mastered diffuse light. Incredible macros, Trent. Highest compliments!
Calliphora vomitoria is quite the name—
It would be a shame not to give it fame:
  1. A fly named Calliphora vomitoria?
    Even maggots say, “That’s too gory-a.”
  2. The bluebottle’s name is Calliphora,
    It dines on death, not on flora.
  3. Calliphora vomitoria, known to roam—
    Born in rot and raised in foam.
  4. It sniffs out corpses with festive cheer,
    Then pops its eggs in your macro gear.
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
We have been staying with my daughter in Manchester for a few days and I spent a couple at the coast, mostly for seascapes but I couldn't resist trying to photograph the gulls with my Tamron 28-200. Probably a herring gull but am open to suggestions. Ken
View attachment 81764
Nice flight shot, Ken! If those legs are pink, a European Herring Gull seems likely. But if they're yellow, Yellow-legged Gull could be the better fit. Hard to be sure from my screen—I can't quite make out the leg and foot color.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
You have mastered diffuse light. Incredible macros, Trent. Highest compliments!
Calliphora vomitoria is quite the name—
It would be a shame not to give it fame:
  1. A fly named Calliphora vomitoria?
    Even maggots say, “That’s too gory-a.”
  2. The bluebottle’s name is Calliphora,
    It dines on death, not on flora.
  3. Calliphora vomitoria, known to roam—
    Born in rot and raised in foam.
  4. It sniffs out corpses with festive cheer,
    Then pops its eggs in your macro gear.
Oh my. You are too much Eric. The writing profession has swollen by another member. I will have a smile on my face all day.
 

Michael13

Well-Known Member
You have mastered diffuse light. Incredible macros, Trent. Highest compliments!
Calliphora vomitoria is quite the name—
It would be a shame not to give it fame:
  1. A fly named Calliphora vomitoria?
    Even maggots say, “That’s too gory-a.”
  2. The bluebottle’s name is Calliphora,
    It dines on death, not on flora.
  3. Calliphora vomitoria, known to roam—
    Born in rot and raised in foam.
  4. It sniffs out corpses with festive cheer,
    Then pops its eggs in your macro gear.
A new Poet Laureate has emerged from the Winged Wednesday society!

I can't wait to hear your prose on the dung beetle!
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
I decided to Bee mindful of our local pollinators this week :)

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Alan, your gardens are a blooming symphony—a living masterpiece filled with spectacular flowers. I truly envy that and love your garden photography. In the first photo, the flower steals the show—and rightly so. In the second, the bee is bee-utiful, with exquisite details that captivate. Highest compliments to you!

Alan's Blooming Brilliance
Bees pollinate,
Flowers dominate.
 
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