Winged Wednesday 5/21/2025: The Art of the Egret

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
This week’s theme is wide open—anything with wings is fair game! What’s been fluttering, flapping, or soaring through your part of the world? Birds, bugs, bats, butterflies, if it takes to the air, it’s welcome here.

Wading birds are long-legged hunters of the shallows, expertly stalking fish, insects, and amphibians in marshes and wetlands. This week, I’m focusing solely on egrets—birds that stand out for their grace and beauty. North America is home to four distinct egret species, each with its own unique plumage, personality, and preferred habitat. Next week, I’ll turn the spotlight on some of North America’s more unusual wading birds.

Great Egret 03273-Edit.jpg

Shallow Water Hunter: Silent and statuesque, the Great Egret stands in still, shallow water, watchful and poised. With deliberate steps and unwavering focus, it waits for just the right flicker of movement. In an instant, it strikes, its slender bill darting like a spear to seize a fish in one fluid motion.

Great egret-7421-Edit.jpg

Unusual Vantage: Perched on the edge of a metal dock at a fish hatchery pond, this Great Egret takes an uncommon approach. Most hunt while wading, but here, it’s using the manmade platform like a watchtower—stalking stocked fish with sharp eyes and even sharper timing. A clever adaptation in an artificial landscape.

Great Egret-03554-Edit.jpg

Precision in Flight: This moment is rare and remarkable: a Great Egret flying low over a school of fish, striking mid-air with pinpoint accuracy. Typically a still hunter, the egret shows off its versatility, plucking prey from the surface without ever landing. It's a dazzling display of instinct, agility, and split-second timing.

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Snowy Egret: Laser Focused

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The Snowy Egret is a high-energy hunter, known for darting through shallow water with quick, purposeful steps. Unlike its more patient cousins, it uses motion and agility to flush out prey, flashing its wings or trailing its vivid yellow feet just above the surface, even in flight. These bright feet act as lures, startling fish and crustaceans from hiding. Clever and opportunistic, the Snowy Egret thrives in salt marshes, tidal flats, and estuaries, where constant movement turns the hunt into a graceful performance.

Reddish Egret FW.jpg

The Reddish Egret is my favorite wading bird. They are the showmen of the shoreline, known for their wild, dance-like hunting style. Unlike the stately Great Egret, it dashes, spins, and leaps through shallow coastal waters, wings outstretched like umbrellas to shade the surface and flush prey into striking range. It thrives in salt flats, lagoons, and tidal pools, where open space and clear water set the stage for its athletic performance. The rarest egret in North America, it’s mostly found along the Gulf Coast and parts of Florida.

Cattle egret-00271-Edit.jpg

The Cattle Egret has charted a different course from its wetland kin, often found far from water as it trails livestock or tractors across open fields. Instead of stalking prey in still waters, it shadows large animals, seizing insects, frogs, and small reptiles flushed from the grass. This clever strategy offers a steady supply of food with minimal effort. Originally native to Africa, the Cattle Egret arrived in the Americas in the 20th century and quickly spread. Today, it thrives in pastures, agricultural fields, and roadside ditches—anywhere disturbance stirs up a meal.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Beautiful set and always nice to see the variety of birds you show us even when you are focused on one species. I am used to Great Egrets only in my area. I will dig out some shots of them anyway just 'cuz I have some :)
 

DES

Well-Known Member
The photo of the Reddish Egret is spectacular! Then.....so is the photo of the Snowy Egret! Well.....they all are great. :)

Darrell
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
This week I'm using images taken on a weekend trip to a woodcarving event. The 2.5 hr. drive was interrupted a few times when a slough in a field begged me to stop. The prairie where I live is dotted with small water bodies that create an environment rich for waterfowl breeding. Many of North American ducks and geese move through the province finding suitable breeding spots.

A pair of Northern Shovelers.

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An American Coot.
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Some Greater White-fronted Geese on their way to breed in Northern Canada and Alaska.
_5170034-Edit.jpg
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
This week’s theme is wide open—anything with wings is fair game! What’s been fluttering, flapping, or soaring through your part of the world? Birds, bugs, bats, butterflies, if it takes to the air, it’s welcome here.

Wading birds are long-legged hunters of the shallows, expertly stalking fish, insects, and amphibians in marshes and wetlands. This week, I’m focusing solely on egrets—birds that stand out for their grace and beauty. North America is home to four distinct egret species, each with its own unique plumage, personality, and preferred habitat. Next week, I’ll turn the spotlight on some of North America’s more unusual wading birds.

View attachment 81632
Shallow Water Hunter: Silent and statuesque, the Great Egret stands in still, shallow water, watchful and poised. With deliberate steps and unwavering focus, it waits for just the right flicker of movement. In an instant, it strikes, its slender bill darting like a spear to seize a fish in one fluid motion.

View attachment 81634
Unusual Vantage: Perched on the edge of a metal dock at a fish hatchery pond, this Great Egret takes an uncommon approach. Most hunt while wading, but here, it’s using the manmade platform like a watchtower—stalking stocked fish with sharp eyes and even sharper timing. A clever adaptation in an artificial landscape.

View attachment 81633
Precision in Flight: This moment is rare and remarkable: a Great Egret flying low over a school of fish, striking mid-air with pinpoint accuracy. Typically a still hunter, the egret shows off its versatility, plucking prey from the surface without ever landing. It's a dazzling display of instinct, agility, and split-second timing.

View attachment 81636
Snowy Egret: Laser Focused

View attachment 81637
The Snowy Egret is a high-energy hunter, known for darting through shallow water with quick, purposeful steps. Unlike its more patient cousins, it uses motion and agility to flush out prey, flashing its wings or trailing its vivid yellow feet just above the surface, even in flight. These bright feet act as lures, startling fish and crustaceans from hiding. Clever and opportunistic, the Snowy Egret thrives in salt marshes, tidal flats, and estuaries, where constant movement turns the hunt into a graceful performance.

View attachment 81635
The Reddish Egret is my favorite wading bird. They are the showmen of the shoreline, known for their wild, dance-like hunting style. Unlike the stately Great Egret, it dashes, spins, and leaps through shallow coastal waters, wings outstretched like umbrellas to shade the surface and flush prey into striking range. It thrives in salt flats, lagoons, and tidal pools, where open space and clear water set the stage for its athletic performance. The rarest egret in North America, it’s mostly found along the Gulf Coast and parts of Florida.

View attachment 81638
The Cattle Egret has charted a different course from its wetland kin, often found far from water as it trails livestock or tractors across open fields. Instead of stalking prey in still waters, it shadows large animals, seizing insects, frogs, and small reptiles flushed from the grass. This clever strategy offers a steady supply of food with minimal effort. Originally native to Africa, the Cattle Egret arrived in the Americas in the 20th century and quickly spread. Today, it thrives in pastures, agricultural fields, and roadside ditches—anywhere disturbance stirs up a meal.
Eric... This is fantastic. A great lesson in the Egret with wonderful dialog and images. I especially liked the Egret catching a fish on the fly. Birds truly are amazing creatures. Thanks for doing this every week.
 

Jeffrey

Well-Known Member
Wading birds are long-legged hunters of the shallows, expertly stalking fish, insects, and amphibians in marshes and wetlands. This week, I’m focusing solely on egrets—birds that stand out for their grace and beauty. North America is home to four distinct egret species, each with its own unique plumage, personality, and preferred habitat. Next week, I’ll turn the spotlight on some of North America’s more unusual wading birds.
Damn, I love these subjects and your fine presentation. Laser Focus take the ribbon from me here. Superb!
 

Jeffrey

Well-Known Member
Bee #1. Only because it's the first one I've photographed that I've finished up. Handheld, in my home garden. Actually, I went to the garden to test a new body and lens that I just got this week, and there were bees. I didn't take much time or thought since I was sure they would never be keepers. Something good happened. Now I love this gear!

bee1.jpg
 
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Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
This week I'm using images taken on a weekend trip to a woodcarving event. The 2.5 hr. drive was interrupted a few times when a slough in a field begged me to stop. The prairie where I live is dotted with small water bodies that create an environment rich for waterfowl breeding. Many of North American ducks and geese move through the province finding suitable breeding spots.

A pair of Northern Shovelers.

View attachment 81639
View attachment 81640

An American Coot.
View attachment 81641

Some Greater White-fronted Geese on their way to breed in Northern Canada and Alaska.
View attachment 81642
Extraordinary photography, Trent. Shovelers rock!!! Those potholes are a haven for breeding ducks. My ducks are gone til winter
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Bee #1. Only because it's the first one I've photographed that I've finished up. Handheld, in my home garden. Actually, I went to the garden to test a new body and lens that I just got this week, and there were bees. I didn't take much time or thought since I was sure they would never be keepers. Something good happened. Now I love this gear!

View attachment 81644
Very cool closeup of the bee. What's your new toy?
 

Jeffrey

Well-Known Member
Very cool closeup of the bee. What's your new toy?
I knew you'd ask! Sony a1 II and 28-70 f2 lens. I already have been using an A1 II for my birds with a 200-600 and needed a backup. This one is setup for general and landscape imaging. I have stored camera setup files for both scenarios and both cameras are then identical.
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Bee #1. Only because it's the first one I've photographed that I've finished up. Handheld, in my home garden. Actually, I went to the garden to test a new body and lens that I just got this week, and there were bees. I didn't take much time or thought since I was sure they would never be keepers. Something good happened. Now I love this gear!

View attachment 81644
Bee-utiful shot, Jeffery. Tell us about your new gear.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
I dug up some egret shots in keeping with Eric's theme but without the elegance of the different varieties.

One from the docks in Florence Oregon:

WW-FlorenceEgret101321.jpg


Salmon Creek in Vancouver, Washington:

CR5m2_SalmonCreekEgret010825.jpg


On a completely different note a bumble bee checking out one of the firecracker columbines in our backyard:

CR5m2_BeeColumbine052025.jpg
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
I knew you'd ask! Sony a1 II and 28-70 f2 lens. I have already been using an A1 II for my birds with a 200-600 and needed a backup. This one is set up for general and landscape imaging. I have stored camera setup files for both scenarios and both cameras are then identical.
Thanks, Jeffery! I also have the Sony a1 II and use the 200–600mm for about 99% of my bird and bug photography. I’ve been eyeing a good low-light lens. When the time comes, the 300mm f/2.8 will be my pick. I’m sure you’ve seen it, but just in case. The a1 II has that insect subject detection mode, which might come in handy when chasing bees and insects.
 
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