Double-crested Cormorants (Explored)
Red over Boston
Palm tree
Double Chysanthemum (Explored)
Fireworks on the Bridge 1
Firworks on the Bridge 2
Nature's mirror (Explored)
The contrarian
Hrrrumph!
The dam in fall
Reflections of a tree
The lone leaf
Fall rushes
Mrs. Mallard
Autumn on the Charles River
Lechmere Canal (2)
Green Line Bridge Over The Charles (1)
Myself on the Mass Ave Bridge
Balusters on Charles River Esplanade
Making a Spash (Explored)
Longfellow Bridge & Beacon Hill (1)
Longfellow Bridge (6)
Mass General and Mass Eye & Ear (2)
Under The Zakim Bridge (1)
Charles River Frozen (1)
Boston Viewed From John Hancock Tower - 1983 (1)
In the splash zone
Angel pose
Fishing on the edge of the dam (Explored)
Snow on the Charles River (1)
Creating a scene
Snapping turtle
Curvaceous (Explored)
Balancing bird
Canada Goose
Inquisitive
Chimney Swift
Sailing on the Charles
Waiting for the fireworks to start
City By Night (Explored)
Stroke!
Packing it in
Racing eights
Men of many expressions
X marks the spot
Photobombing duck (Explored)
Dancing Duck
By the falls (Explored)
Take off
Wings over the dam (Explored)
Peeking over the falls
"Look Ma, no hands"
Spash buddies (Explored)
The party's over
Enjoying the sun
Low in the water
Waiting
Up close (Explored)
At rest
Preening
In flight
Making a splash (Explored)
1/500 • f/9.0 • 500.0 mm • ISO 2500 •
Canon EOS 70D
TAMRON SP 150-600mm F/5-6.3 Di VC USD A011
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"Double-crested Cormorants are colonial waterbirds that seek aquatic bodies big enough to support their mostly fish diet. However, they may roost and form breeding colonies on smaller lagoons or ponds, and then fly up to 40 miles to a feeding area. In addition to fishing waters, cormorants need perching areas for the considerable amount of time they spend resting each day. After fishing, cormorants retire to high, airy perches to dry off and digest their meals—rocks, wires, tops of dead trees, ship masts. They tend to form breeding colonies in clusters of trees in or near water. After a while, masses of cormorant guano may kill these trees and the trees may topple, at which point the cormorants may switch to nesting on the ground."
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Double-crested_Cormorant/lifehistory
AIMG 4102
www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Double-crested_Cormorant/lifehistory
AIMG 4102
Jeff Farley, cammino, Annemarie, William Sutherland and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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We don't have bunnies that eat everything. We have deer and they really do eat anything and everything.
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