Categories
Daily

December 2022

December 20, 2022  I cannot be in the sun yet, but this morning I looked out and there was a flock of White Pelicans! I had to be at the Senior Center at 8 AM but took a few photos standing on the shore at my place.

December 10, 2022  And the great days keep coming! The duck that I thought was a Greebe was indeed a Red-breasted Merganser! No manatees or dolphin today. It was cloudy to start but the sun came out. Lots of boats out today. The red boat I showed with five 450 engines I was told, can go over 100 mph and cost well over a million dollars!

Sandpiper
Juvenile Little Blue, they start out all white and then blue when they molt over the years, the Ibis starts out dark grey and turns all white after three years. White turns blue, grey turns white. Why that is I do not know.
Juvenile Little Blue, his blue face gives him away.
When the tide goes out a lot, Ibis and Snowy come to feed on the low water areas.
Yellow Crown Night Heron
Crab for breakfast.
Junior Night Heron
The Merganser was still here.
Two ducks on the wing.
Egret
Lady Anhinga on her usual perch.
Little Green
Female
Male Mallard
Cormorant about to take off.
Ibis
Mocking Bird
Tri-color
The Tri-color and the Reddish have the same method of fishing. They stand in one place for a minute then dash around with their wings up! Both seem to think dashing around is more successful than standing. The Snowy has another interesting way to fish, they wiggle their feet ahead of themselves to scare up anything that is there.
Tri-color
Turkey Vulture.

December 9, 2022  Another beautiful day…but not until 10 AM, it was foggy early on so I did a shortened run.  Among the birds I did see was a Merganser .I was chastened by someone who says I need to have more verbiage, so here goes.

Early on there was a fog warning that came across my Alexa, and yes it was a white out out there, a flat sea and fog. It was 63 degrees out and the air could not hold as much water as it did the evening before, so the result was fog: water droplets hanging in the still air. A friend gave me a trash bag to bundle my camera in as the camera was getting wet. By 10 AM the fog had burned off and the low clouds had moved away and the sun finally came out.
An Anhinga. They are sometimes called snakebird, darter, American darter, or water bird. The word anhinga comes from the Brazilian Tupi language and means "devil bird" or "snake bird". The origin of the name is apparent when swimming: only the neck appears above water so the bird looks like a snake There are several that live around me. The Male is all black, the female (shown above) has a brown neck down to the shoulders.
The Snowy Egret. This one just landed and shook itself - thus the feathers are all fluffed out. The snowy egret (Egretta thula) is a small white heron. The genus name comes from Provençal French for the little egret, aigrette, which is a diminutive of aigron, 'heron'. The species name thula is the Araucano term for the black-necked swan, applied to this species in error by Chilean naturalist Juan Ignacio Molina in 1782.The snowy egret is the American counterpart to the very similar Old World little egret, which has become established in the Bahamas. At one time, the plumes of the snowy egret were in great demand as decorations for women's hats.They were hunted for these plumes and this reduced the population of the species to dangerously low levels Now protected in the United States by law, under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, this bird's population has rebounded. They stand in the shallow water along the shore or balance on dock lines as they watch for the small fish which is their prey. They are not very skittish and sometimes will walk up to about 10 feet of me if I sit still.
Great Blue Heron. Scientific name: Ardea herodias Lifespan: 15 years Wingspan: 66–79 in Beak Color: Orange-yellow Found In: North America With a wingspan of over 6.5 ft and a length of up to 4.25 ft, great blue herons are the largest North American herons. You will identify great blue herons by their large yellow-orange beaks, short black plumes on their heads, and black and chestnut pattern on their shoulders. You can find them around shores of open water and wetlands. Great blue herons tend to hold their necks in an S-shape with their legs trailing behind while flying. They are monogamous only for a single season and will go through some interesting courtship rituals, locking and rubbing their bills on the feathers of the other bird before mating. The great blue heron (Ardea herodias) is a large wading bird in the heron family Ardeidae, common near the shores of open water and in wetlands over most of North America and Central America, as well as the Caribbean and the Galápagos Islands. It is a rare vagrant to coastal Spain, the Azores, and areas of far southern Europe. An all-white population found in south Florida and the Florida Keys is known as the great white heron. Debate exists about whether this represents a white color morph of the great blue heron, a subspecies of it, or an entirely separate species. They have built a huge nest at the north tip of the island, they made great advances to each other, and then for some reason abandoned it. Over the years there were many nests and successful hatces all over the island, but no more. The ones here are very skittish and I cannot get within 30 yards of them. If they are several yards up the west side of the island, as soon as I round the south tip they fly away. It thus is now rare that I can get a close up of one.
Another Great Blue up in the mangroves.
Thge Egret and the Great Blue Heron are very tall, usually about 4 feet tall. Many egrets are members of the genera Egretta or Ardea, which also contain other species named as herons rather than egrets. The distinction between a heron and an egret is rather vague, and depends more on appearance than biology. The word "egret" comes from the French word aigrette that means both "silver heron" and "brush", referring to the long, filamentous feathers that seem to cascade down an egret's back during the breeding season (also called "egrets"). Several of the egrets have been reclassified from one genus to another in recent years; the great egret, for example, has been classified as a member of either Casmerodius, Egretta, or Ardea. In the 19th and early part of the 20th centuries, some of the world's egret species were endangered by relentless plume hunting, since hat makers in Europe and the United States demanded large numbers of egret plumes, leading to breeding birds being killed in many places around the world. Airplane designers noted that the feathers just outside the shoulder flaired up upon landing. This is where the forward flaps of airplanes came from, mimicing nature!
Egret watching for fish or crabs to come by. Egrets and Great Blue Herons will eat fish, other birds, and small mammals. A friend was setting up her tripod to take photos of a little bunny. Along came a Great Blue and the bunny was instantly swallowed as lunch.
An Egret on the wing, Egrets have a yellow beak where Snowys have a black beak, my way of differating them if I cannot see the yellow feet of the Snowy.
Osprey. The osprey (Pandion haliaetus), also called sea hawk, river hawk, and fish hawk, is a diurnal, fish-eating bird of prey with a cosmopolitan range. It is a large raptor reaching more than 60 cm (24 in) in length and 180 cm (71 in) across the wings. It is brown on the upperparts and predominantly white on the head and underparts. The osprey tolerates a wide variety of habitats, nesting in any location near a body of water providing an adequate food supply. It is found on all continents except Antarctica, although in South America it occurs only as a non-breeding migrant. As its other common names suggest, the osprey's diet consists almost exclusively of fish. It possesses specialized physical characteristics (long sharp claws) and exhibits unique behavior (it hangs almost still up in the air waiting for a fish to surface) to assist in hunting and catching prey. As a result of these unique characteristics, it has been given its own taxonomic genus, Pandion, and family, Pandionidae
A Merganser I have seen here, there were two of them, one swam with his head up higher than the other.
Merganser
Oystercatcher. Scientific name: Haematopus palliatus Lifespan: 10-14 years Wingspan: 35 in Beak Color: Vivid orange-red Found In: Atlantic coast of North America The American oystercatcher is a large shorebird found on the Atlantic and Gulf Coast beaches. It has distinctive black and white plumage, red-yellow eyes, and a long, bright orange beak. The beak is razor-sharp and the animal uses it to pry open oysters and other bivalves for food, hence the name “oystercatcher”. Oystercatchers are social birds that can be often seen during the day foraging, preening, resting, and sunbathing. They nest up on roof and bring their young down to the water to teach them how to find food.
Oystercatcher with breakfast.
Cormorant The double-crested cormorant (Nannopterum auritum) is a member of the cormorant family of water birds. It is found near rivers and lakes, and in coastal areas, and is widely distributed across North America, from the Aleutian Islands in Alaska down to Florida and Mexico. Measuring 70–90 cm (28–35 in) in length, it is entirely black except for a bare patch of orange-yellow facial skin and some extra plumage that it exhibits in the breeding season, when it grows a double crest in which black feathers are mingled with white. Five subspecies are recognized. It mainly eats fish and hunts by swimming and diving. Its feathers, like those of all cormorants, are not waterproof and it must spend time drying them out after spending time in the water. Once threatened by the use of DDT, the numbers of this bird have increased markedly in recent years. They sometimes come up to my kayak, I suspect they want fish!
Tricolored Heron. measures from 56 to 76 cm (22 to 30 in) long and has a typical wingspan of 96 cm (38 in).[2] The slightly larger male heron weighs 415 g (14.6 oz) on average, while the female averages 334 g (11.8 oz).[3] It is a medium-large, long-legged, long-necked heron with a long, pointed, yellowish or greyish bill with a black tip. Its legs and feet are dark. Adults have a blue-grey head, neck, back, and upper wings, with a white line along the neck. The belly is white. In breeding plumage, they have long, blue, filamentous plumes on their heads and necks, and buff ones on their backs. They are infrequent visitors here.
Yellow Crowned Night Heron, It takes about three years for yellow-crowned night herons to acquire the full physical appearance of adults. Before that, the young birds show signs of immaturity such as a brownish body, an overall greyish head, drab colors and spots and streaks on their plumage. Although the adults are easy to tell apart, juvenile yellow-crowned night heron can look very similar to juvenile black-crowned night heron. Yellow-crowned juveniles tend to stand straighter and have heavier bills and longer legs, and their spots and streaks are finer than those of the black-crowned. I see several of the Yellow almost every day. I watched one swallow whole a baby duckling once, but the generally eat fish and crabs,

December 8, 2022  Beautiful weather, 16 species of birds today (only 10 yesterday). I was waiting for the sea grape grapes to ripen to make jelly, but the birds need them more then I do.

Female Mallard Duck
Osprey
Anhinga
Juvenile Yellow Crowned Night Heron.
Adult Yellow Crowned Night Heron
Lady Anhinga on her usual perch.
Egret and Brown Pelican
Osprey on the oyster bar!
Cormorant
Female Anhinga.
Little Green
Wood Stork
I startled this Little Green
Male Kingfisher at a distance and in the shadows!
TriColor
Blue Jay eating my sea grape grapes!
Across from Bob and Diane. When I went north by here there were no birds. An hour later going south there were two Cormorants (night side of photo), two Ducks, an Egret , two Ibis, and a Great Blue!!
Little Green
Snowy

December 7, 2022  Tee shirt again today, lots of photos!

Ibis fishing
Caught a crab
Yellow Crowned Night Heron
Black Crowned Night Heron
Egret
Ibis on the wing
Two Cormorants
Osprey
Almost $400,00 in outboard motors alone.
Name of a large catamaran.
Laughing Gull.
Cormorant
Detail of that blue eye!
Little Green Heron
Juvenile Night Heron (Black or yellow will come out later)
Juvenile Angel (has no wings yet)
Protector of Angel above.
Fisherman
Female Anhinga in her usual spot.
Each Ibis has a different leg held up.
Juvenile Ibis.
Ibis on top od a 70 foot tall Norfolk Island pine.
Two Storks
Bob has his Christmas lights out.
Egret makes a splash.
And comes up with a fish for a snack.
Juvenile Little Blue Heron.
Flock of Ibis.
The top of Jim and Dianne's Christmas tree out on the back porch.
Monarch butterfly laying her eggs on my milkweed.
Juvenile manatee.
Big manatee with a second manatee upper left!
Old manatee with growth all over it!
55 inch telescope Marian's son in law gave to me.
Photo of the island a quarter mile away.

December 5, 2022  Another beautiful tee shirt day!  Lots of birds (four Kingfishers but no photos). 

Brown Pelican
Snowy
Cormorant
Egret
Anhinga
Yellow Crowned Night Heron
Little Blue
Duck
Anhinga
Little Green - he was staring at the guys duing the yardwork

December 4, 2022
Another beautiful morning! Marian came with me and we saw a dolphin cone up right in front of us!

Below is a video Marian took of me taking down a fish someone had left hanging.

Ibis fishing
Yellow Crowned Night Heron
Yellow Crowned Night Heron
Female Anhinga
Osprey
Great Blue Heron
Juvenile Blue Heron with breakfast.
Juvenile Blue HeronHeron
Cormorant preening.
Cormorant
Snowy
Marian

December 3, 2022  Out kayaking today was incredibly beautiful! I saw a manatee (no photos though), a flock of Parrots, Great Blue Herons, etc., but again no photos. What I did get were beautiful photos and a sequence of an Osprey catching breakfast!

Adult Yellow Crowned Night Heron, one of three I saw.
Juvenile Yellow Crown Night Heron
Female Anhinga
Another Anhinga
Snowy
Osprey on the lookout.
Osprey on a piling, unusual.
Third Anhinga.
Little Green Heron
Cormorant
Osprey holding steady in the sky looking for a fish.
Osprey after the strike.
And he comes up with a fish!
Enough food for a couple of days!
Off he goes to enjoy breakfast.
This bird has 300 souls in its belly! I like the way it tucks is landing gear up, but not inside.

December 1, 2022   I had my annual visit with the vampire this morning, so no kayaking.

I posted the following on Quora a year ago and thought it good enough to post again.

Egyptian Proverbs (interpreted from hieroglyphics)

Egyptian Proverbs were a very important part of the Ancient people of Egypt, one of the main concepts the Egyptians had was “know yourself.” Their spiritual aspect of this concept held that within man is Power.  Proverbs were held as a teaching method for a man to understand their idea of the universe, thus they were inscribed in temples and tombs of Egypt. The “Book of the Dead” is the name given to a genre of mortuary spells, magical texts, and accompanying illustrations called vignettes. These were written on sheets of papyrus, the walls of tombs and coffins. They were placed with the dead in order to help them pass through the dangers of the underworld and attain an afterlife of bliss in the Field of Peace. The various texts were composed over thousands of years, and total nearly two hundred, no one media contains them all. {Field of Peace -Variously translated as the Field of Offerings, Field of Reeds, or Blessed Fields, the place that preserves the pleasures of ancient Egyptian life for eternity}. 

Below are some of the powerful teachings proverbs found in the temples of Luxor written thousands of years ago.

– The best and shortest road towards knowledge of truth is Nature.
– For every joy there is a price to be paid.
– If his heart rules him, his conscience will soon take the place of the rod.
– What you are doing does not matter so much as what you are learning from doing it. It is better not to know and to know what one does not know, than presumptuously to attribute some random meaning to symbols.
– If you search for the laws of harmony, you will find knowledge.
– If you are searching for a super power, observe Nature!

– Exuberance is a good stimulus towards action, but the inner light grows in silence and concentration.
– Not the greatest Master can go even one step for his disciple; in himself he must experience each stage of developing consciousness. Therefore he will know nothing for which he is not ripe.
– The body is the house of god. That is why it is said, “Man know yourself.”

– True teaching is not an accumulation of knowledge; it is an awaking of consciousness which goes through successive stages.
– The man who knows how to lead one of his brothers towards what he has known may one day be saved by that very brother.
– People bring about their own undoing through their tongues.
– If one tries to navigate unknown waters one runs the risk of shipwreck.
– Leave him in error who loves his error.
– Every man is rich in excuses to safeguard his prejudices, his instincts, and his opinions.
– To know means to record in one’s memory; but to understand means to blend with the thing and to assimilate it oneself.

– There are two kinds of error: blind credulity and piecemeal criticism. Never believe a word without putting its truth to the test; discernment does not grow in laziness; and this faculty of discernment is indispensable to the Seeker. Sound skepticism is the necessary condition for good discernment; but piecemeal criticism is an error.
– Love is one thing, knowledge is another.
– True sages are those who give what they have, without meanness and without secret!
– An answer brings no illumination unless the question has matured to a point where it gives rise to this answer which thus becomes its fruit. Therefore learn how to put a question.
– What reveals itself to me ceases to be mysterious for me alone: if I unveil it to anyone else, he hears mere words which betray the living sense: Profanation, but never revelation.
– The first concerning the ‘secrets’: all cognition comes from inside; we are therefore initiated only by ourselves, but the Master gives the keys.
– The second concerning the ‘way’: the seeker has need of a Master to guide him and lift him up when he falls, to lead him back to the right way when he strays.
– Understanding develops by degrees.
– As to deserving, know that the gift of heaven is free; this gift of Knowledge is so great that no effort whatever could hope to ‘deserve’ it.
– If the Master teaches what is error, the disciple’s submission is slavery ; if he teaches truth, this submission is ennoblement.
– There grows no wheat where there is no grain.
– The only thing that is humiliating is helplessness.
– An answer if profitable in proportion to the intensity of the quest.
– Listen to your conviction, even if they seem absurd to your reason.

— Know the world in yourself. Never look for yourself in the world, for this would be to project your illusion
– To teach one must know the nature of those whom one is teaching.
– In every vital activity it is the path that matters.
– The way of knowledge is narrow.
– Each truth you learn will be, for you, as new as if it had never been written.
– The only active force that arises out of possession is fear of losing the object of possession.
– If you defy an enemy by doubting his courage you double it.
– The nut doesn’t reveal the tree it contains.
– For knowledge… you should know that peace is an indispensable condition of getting it.
– The first thing necessary in teaching is a master; the second is a pupil capable of carrying on the tradition.
– Peace is the fruit of activity, not of sleep.
– Envious greed must govern to possess and ambition must possess to govern.
– When the governing class isn’t chosen for quality it is chosen for material wealth: this always means decadence, the lowest stage a society can reach.

– One foot isn’t enough to walk with.
– Our senses serve to affirm, not to know.
– We mustn’t confuse mastery with mimicry, knowledge with superstitious ignorance.
– Physical consciousness is indispensable for the achievement of knowledge.
– A man can’t be judge of his neighbor’ intelligence. His own vital experience is never his neighbor’s.
– No discussion can throw light if it wanders from the real point.
– Your body is the temple of knowledge.
– Experience will show you, a Master can only point the way.

– A house has the character of the man who lives in it.
– All organs work together in the functioning of the whole.
– A man’s heart is his own super power.
– A pupil may show you by his own efforts how much he deserves to learn from you.
– Routine and prejudice distort vision. Each man thinks his own horizon is the limit of the world.
– You will free yourself when you learn to be neutral and follow the instructions of your heart without letting things perturb you. This is the way of Maat.
– Judge by cause, not by effect.
– Growth in consciousness doesn’t depend on the will of the intellect or its possibilities but on the intensity of the inner urge.
– Every man must act in the rhythm of his time… such is wisdom.
– Men need images. Lacking them they invent idols. Better then to found the images on realities that lead the true seeker to the source.
– Maat, who links universal to terrestrial, the divine with the human is incomprehensible to the cerebral intelligence.
– Have the wisdom to abandon the values of a time that has passed and pick out the constituents of the future. An environment must be suited to the age and men to their environment.
– Everyone finds himself in the world where he belongs. The essential thing is to have a fixed point from which to check its reality now and then.
– Always watch and follow nature.

– A phenomenon always arises from the interaction of complementary. If you want something look for the complement that will elicit it. Seth causes Horus.
– Horus redeems Seth.
– All seed answer light, but the color is different.
– The plant reveals what is in the seed.
– Popular beliefs on essential matters must be examined in order to discover the original thought.
– It is the passive resistance from the helm that steers the boat.
– The key to all problems is the problem of consciousness.
– Man must learn to increase his sense of responsibility and of the fact that everything he does will have its consequences.
– If you would build something solid, don’t work with wind: always look for a fixed point, something you know that is stable… yourself.
– If you would know yourself, take yourself as starting point and go back to its source; your beginning will disclose your end.
– Images are nearer reality than cold definitions.
– Seek peacefully, you will find.
– Organization is impossible unless those who know the laws of harmony lay the foundation.
– It is no use whatever preaching Wisdom to men: you must inject it into their blood.
– Knowledge is consciousness of reality. Reality is the sum of the laws that govern nature and of the causes from which they flow.
– Social good is what brings peace to family and society.
– Knowledge is not necessarily wisdom.
– By knowing one reaches belief. By doing one gains conviction. When you know, dare.
– Altruism is the mark of a superior being.
– All is within yourself. Know your most inward self and look for what corresponds with it in nature.
– The seed cannot sprout upwards without simultaneously sending roots into the ground.
– The seed includes all the possibilities of the tree…. The seed will develop these possibilities, however, only if it receives corresponding energies from the sky.
– Grain must return to the earth, die, and decompose for new growth to begin.
– Man, know yourself… and you shalt know the gods.