Winged Wednesday 2/11/2026: Open Theme and Doves

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
It’s Winged Wednesday, where feathers, flutters, and flight steal the show! Whether they’re zipping, swooping, sunbathing, or just striking a sassy pose, we want to see your favorite winged wonders. Birds, bugs, bats, or butterflies—if it’s got wings, it’s fair game. You can share up to six photos each week.

This week, I’m featuring doves—a family of birds that treats flight as optional, drama as unnecessary, and stillness as a lifestyle choice. They perch, they stroll, they coo thoughtfully at nothing in particular, content to exist quietly while other birds feel the need to announce themselves.

Doves are built for short, efficient flights, not aerial showmanship. Their wings are practical tools, meant to move a bird from ground to branch with no unnecessary commentary. Flying costs energy, and doves see no reason to waste it.

If there’s food on the ground, they walk.
If there’s shade nearby, they perch.
If danger appears, they leave—suddenly and without apology.

This is why you see doves everywhere except soaring. When they do take flight, it’s brief and efficient: up, across, finished. No looping. No lingering. No joy.

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Ruddy Ground Dove
A small cinnamon ghost that strolls the ground on practical little feet, regarding flight the way sensible people regard stairs: useful, but why bother?

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White-winged Dove
Broad-shouldered and unhurried, this is a dove that flies only when absolutely required—and then reminds you it didn’t enjoy the experience.

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Mourning Dove
Perpetually sighing, gently haunted, and always a little disappointed in the state of things. The sound of calm, if calm were also a mild existential crisis.

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Inca Dove
All ruffles and restraint, the Inca Dove looks like it arrived overdressed for the desert and decided to stay anyway.


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Rose-crowned Fruit Dove (Australia)
A bird so tasteful it makes the forest feel underdressed. A canopy dove, fruit-fed and leaf-lit, wearing color that vanishes among leaves.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
I was thinking that all of the doves looked like ones I had seen until the last image. I never had a clue there were doves that looked like that one. Neat looking bird.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
My that last dove is so colourful. I echo Alan's comments. I enjoyed your description of Dove movements and attitudes Eric.
Here is my addition to the Dove theme.

We mostly have Mourning Doves in our area.

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In the last few years Eurasian Collared-Doves have been moving into our province. I have not photographed one in my area but did manage a shot of this one on Vancouver Island.
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I'm not positive I have the correct Id for this last one. It was taken in New Zealand a few years ago and was identified as a Barlbary Dove. I think they are not native to NZ.
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AlanLichty

Moderator
Really nice avian imagery so far - almost hate to break the trend but my winged offering isn't quite up to the level of excellence on display above. This was a busy mid day at my local wetland where close in access isn't an option I have and long range telephotos are the best I can do.

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Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
My that last dove is so colourful. I echo Alan's comments. I enjoyed your description of Dove movements and attitudes Eric.
Here is my addition to the Dove theme.

We mostly have Mourning Doves in our area.

View attachment 87415
View attachment 87414

In the last few years Eurasian Collared-Doves have been moving into our province. I have not photographed one in my area but did manage a shot of this one on Vancouver Island.
View attachment 87412

I'm not positive I have the correct Id for this last one. It was taken in New Zealand a few years ago and was identified as a Barlbary Dove. I think they are not native to NZ.
View attachment 87413
Excellent work on the doves, Trent. I agree, the last one is a Barbary Dove. I came across this info when researching: "The Barbary dove is the domesticated form of the African collared dove (Streptopelia roseogrisea), a native of the Sahel, Ethiopia, and the Arabian Peninsula. It has been domesticated for many hundreds of years, something that is reflected in its confiding and gentle nature.“
 
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