Winged Wednesday 6.25.2025: Feet-First and Divers

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
It’s Winged Wednesday, where feathers, flutters, and flight steal the show! Whether they’re zipping, swooping, sunbathing, or 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!

Last week, we went headfirst. This week’s theme: Feet-First and Fierce.
Not all divers lead with their beaks. Some birds plunge feet-first, talons outstretched like nature’s grappling hooks. Others dash across the surface like they’re skimming a hot griddle. Whether it’s raptors striking with surgical precision or waders sprinting on water, these birds let their legs do the talking.

My contribution:
I’m sharing five birds (seven photos) who make a splash—some by diving, one by dropping feet-first with talons out. From a puffin turned guided missile to an osprey grabbing breakfast, these birds show off their best launch or landing gear. Whether they dive, plunge, or sprint across the surface, they all bring style and precision to the water.

Osprey-04824-Edit.jpg

Osprey – The Splash and Grab Specialist
This is what “feet-first” looks like when you mean it. The osprey dives with talons out, strikes with precision, and emerges—rainbow trout secured—wings flared and eyes locked forward. Built-in fish hooks!

Anhinga-02879-Edit.jpg

Anhinga – The Spear Goes Airborne
Anhingas usually hunt underwater, swimming with stealth and striking like a living harpoon. But now and then, one takes the plunge from above. Here, just an instant before impact, its dagger-like bill is aimed with surgical precision. The fish below has no idea what's coming.

Anhinga-04328-Edit.jpg

Anhinga – The Soaked Sunbather
Unlike ducks, anhingas don’t have waterproof feathers. That makes it easier to sink and swim underwater without fighting buoyancy—but it comes at a price. After the hunt, they have to spread their wings and air-dry like soggy laundry on a limb. It's part predator, part solar panel.

Tufted Puffin eye shine.jpg

Tufted Puffin – Clown Above, Torpedo Below
With that flamboyant headgear and solemn stare, the Tufted Puffin looks like it wandered in from a costume party. But beneath the surface, it's all business. Puffins don’t just dive—they fly underwater, using powerful wingbeats to chase fish with acrobatic precision.

Atlantic puffin-03857-Edit.png

Atlantic Puffin – Wings Out, Attitude On
Perched on guano-covered granite, whitened by years of occupancy, this Atlantic Puffin strikes a welcoming pose. With wings outstretched, he seems to say, “These get me airborne—but they’re even better underwater.” Also handy for fending off nosy photographers. Just sayin’.

Double-crested cormorant-07420-Edit.jpg

Double-crested Cormorant – Runway Optional
You’re looking at liftoff, cormorant style. With wings stretched forward and feet slapping the water in a frantic hop-run, he’s not airborne yet—but don’t tell him that. It may not be graceful, but it works—like a feathered speedboat with big dreams. Underwater, it’s a different story. Cormorants are agile pursuit divers, using their strong legs and webbed feet to chase down fish with sudden twists and tight turns. If it wriggles, they’ll catch it.

Common Merganser-00135-Edit.jpg

Common Mergansers – Full Throttle
Three female mergansers, feet lifted and wings churning, sprint across the surface like they’ve got somewhere important to be—together. These sleek divers chase fish underwater with speed and precision, using long, serrated bills like built-in steak knives. When it’s time to go airborne, they don’t coast—they blast off.


Final Thought:
Whether it’s talons out, wings back, or a frantic splash-and-dash, these birds prove that grace is optional—but commitment is mandatory. Dive like no one’s watching, or like everyone’s watching and you want a fish and a round of applause.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
It’s Winged Wednesday, where feathers, flutters, and flight steal the show! Whether they’re zipping, swooping, sunbathing, or 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!

Last week, we went headfirst. This week’s theme: Feet-First and Fierce.
Not all divers lead with their beaks. Some birds plunge feet-first, talons outstretched like nature’s grappling hooks. Others dash across the surface like they’re skimming a hot griddle. Whether it’s raptors striking with surgical precision or waders sprinting on water, these birds let their legs do the talking.

My contribution:
I’m sharing five birds (seven photos) who make a splash—some by diving, one by dropping feet-first with talons out. From a puffin turned guided missile to an osprey grabbing breakfast, these birds show off their best launch or landing gear. Whether they dive, plunge, or sprint across the surface, they all bring style and precision to the water.

View attachment 82540
Osprey – The Splash and Grab Specialist
This is what “feet-first” looks like when you mean it. The osprey dives with talons out, strikes with precision, and emerges—rainbow trout secured—wings flared and eyes locked forward. Built-in fish hooks!

View attachment 82541
Anhinga – The Spear Goes Airborne
Anhingas usually hunt underwater, swimming with stealth and striking like a living harpoon. But now and then, one takes the plunge from above. Here, just an instant before impact, its dagger-like bill is aimed with surgical precision. The fish below has no idea what's coming.

View attachment 82542
Anhinga – The Soaked Sunbather
Unlike ducks, anhingas don’t have waterproof feathers. That makes it easier to sink and swim underwater without fighting buoyancy—but it comes at a price. After the hunt, they have to spread their wings and air-dry like soggy laundry on a limb. It's part predator, part solar panel.

View attachment 82544
Tufted Puffin – Clown Above, Torpedo Below
With that flamboyant headgear and solemn stare, the Tufted Puffin looks like it wandered in from a costume party. But beneath the surface, it's all business. Puffins don’t just dive—they fly underwater, using powerful wingbeats to chase fish with acrobatic precision.

View attachment 82543
Atlantic Puffin – Wings Out, Attitude On
Perched on guano-covered granite, whitened by years of occupancy, this Atlantic Puffin strikes a welcoming pose. With wings outstretched, he seems to say, “These get me airborne—but they’re even better underwater.” Also handy for fending off nosy photographers. Just sayin’.

View attachment 82545
Double-crested Cormorant – Runway Optional
You’re looking at liftoff, cormorant style. With wings stretched forward and feet slapping the water in a frantic hop-run, he’s not airborne yet—but don’t tell him that. It may not be graceful, but it works—like a feathered speedboat with big dreams. Underwater, it’s a different story. Cormorants are agile pursuit divers, using their strong legs and webbed feet to chase down fish with sudden twists and tight turns. If it wriggles, they’ll catch it.

View attachment 82546
Common Mergansers – Full Throttle
Three female mergansers, feet lifted and wings churning, sprint across the surface like they’ve got somewhere important to be—together. These sleek divers chase fish underwater with speed and precision, using long, serrated bills like built-in steak knives. When it’s time to go airborne, they don’t coast—they blast off.


Final Thought:
Whether it’s talons out, wings back, or a frantic splash-and-dash, these birds prove that grace is optional—but commitment is mandatory. Dive like no one’s watching, or like everyone’s watching and you want a fish and a round of applause.
Beautiful as always Eric. That trio of Mergansers seems like it is the opening to a bird ballet.
 
Last edited:

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
My wings for this week are from this week. I went for a walk in my neighbourhood and came up with a couple of shots.

A Northern Flicker in my local park was feeding on ants in the grass. I used the pro-capture feature and got down low waiting for the bird to fly off. This is the shot I kept from the 99 images it took when I pressed the shutter.
_6221192-Enhanced-NR.jpg


Last fall some other birders asked me if I had seen the roost where many Turkey Vultures gathered every evening. It was late in the fall when I found out about it and never did see them. Two days ago I was on a walk and saw two Turkey Vultures low in the sky heading in the general direction of that roosting tree. I walked over and sure enough these two birds were in the tree preening. This seems quite unusual as it is a big spruce tree in someone's front yard on a busy residential street. The only spot I could get to see the birds was from the back alley.
_6221433-Edit.jpg


Here you can see three birds as large black blobs. The heads only came up for a few seconds in the 10 or so minutes I watched them. The rest of the time they were preening.
There may have been other birds but I couldn't spot them.

_6221440-Edit.jpg
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
My wings for this week are from this week. I went for a walk in my neighbourhood and came up with a couple of shots.

A Northern Flicker in my local park was feeding on ants in the grass. I used the pro-capture feature and got down low waiting for the bird to fly off. This is the shot I kept from the 99 images it took when I pressed the shutter.
View attachment 82550

Last fall some other birders asked me if I had seen the roost where many Turkey Vultures gathered every evening. It was late in the fall when I found out about it and never did see them. Two days ago I was on a walk and saw two Turkey Vultures low in the sky heading in the general direction of that roosting tree. I walked over and sure enough these two birds were in the tree preening. This seems quite unusual as it is a big spruce tree in someone's front yard on a busy residential street. The only spot I could get to see the birds was from the back alley.
View attachment 82551

Here you can see three birds as large black blobs. The heads only came up for a few seconds in the 10 or so minutes I watched them. The rest of the time they were preening.
There may have been other birds but I couldn't spot them.

View attachment 82552
Trent, this is not a photo—this is aviation excellence. That Yellow-shafted Flicker is flying straight at you like it just remembered it left the oven on. Wings from 3 to 9 o’clock? That’s bird talk for “prepare to be amazed.” Up here in my part of the desert, we get the Red-shafted Flicker—classy, understated, probably listens to vinyl. South of me, it’s the Gilded Flicker, who shows up late, wears gold, and refuses to answer texts.

By the way, the Red-shafted and Yellow-shafted Flickers aren’t separate species—they’re subspecies of the Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus). Where their ranges overlap, they interbreed freely. Which is bird for “it’s complicated.” Also, those Turkey Vultures? Respect. Nothing says “we clean up after the drama” like vultures.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
Trent, this is not a photo—this is aviation excellence. That Yellow-shafted Flicker is flying straight at you like it just remembered it left the oven on. Wings from 3 to 9 o’clock? That’s bird talk for “prepare to be amazed.” Up here in my part of the desert, we get the Red-shafted Flicker—classy, understated, probably listens to vinyl. South of me, it’s the Gilded Flicker, who shows up late, wears gold, and refuses to answer texts.

By the way, the Red-shafted and Yellow-shafted Flickers aren’t separate species—they’re subspecies of the Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus). Where their ranges overlap, they interbreed freely. Which is bird for “it’s complicated.” Also, those Turkey Vultures? Respect. Nothing says “we clean up after the drama” like vultures.
I appreciate your extensive comment Eric. Always worth a couple of reads to make sure I collect all the humour and information.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Last year I was lucky to have a pair of scrub jays raising a youngster in an arborvitae adjacent to my yard and got to see them a lot. No such luck this year but I did grab quite a few shots of them last summer.

C5D4_WatchBird061324.jpg


My favorite feet first landing on the water shot for Eric's theme:

CR5m2_WaterWalker011925.jpg
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Last year I was lucky to have a pair of scrub jays raising a youngster in an arborvitae adjacent to my yard and got to see them a lot. No such luck this year but I did grab quite a few shots of them last summer.

View attachment 82558

My favorite feet first landing on the water shot for Eric's theme:

View attachment 82559
Alan, the timing on that Great Egret shot is exceptional—just before the feet touch the water. That’s a moment most people miss. The Scrub Jay is solid too—one of my favorite poses is the look-back-over-the-shoulder. Funny enough, the back of the bird is often prettier than the front.

Photographing birds is a skill—and so is just seeing them. It takes anticipation, patience, and a lot of practice. It’s a different challenge than flowers or landscapes, but the principles carry over. What makes a great floral image—composition, color, detail, clean background—matters just as much in birds and wildlife. The only difference? Your subject never holds still and has no idea you’re trying to make them look good.

I might take a hundred shots of a bird and keep just one. But when it works, it’s worth every missed frame. Keep at it—you’re clearly on the right track.
 
Last edited:

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
More Puffins from me.
They have a wonderful walk
View attachment 82563

When returning back to the mainland the boat passed close to a small flock of puffins and they decided to fly with a manic whir of wings
View attachment 82564

This one was totally unperturbed by our boat
View attachment 82565
Ken, this trio is pure puffin gold. That marching puffin? Looks like the drum major of the North Atlantic Marching Band—high step, full purpose, no nonsense. The second shot is chaos in motion—six puffins scattering like someone just yelled “free herring!” behind them. And the third? That water shot is spectacular. The gray, white, and blue patterns are pure paisley perfection. Letting a puffin swim solo on that surface is like handing a penguin a Monet and saying, “Go blend in.”
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Alan, the timing on that Great Egret shot is exceptional—just before the feet touch the water. That’s a moment most people miss. The Scrub Jay is solid too—one of my favorite poses is the look-back-over-the-shoulder. Funny enough, the back of the bird is often prettier than the front.

Photographing birds is a skill—and so is just seeing them. It takes anticipation, patience, and a lot of practice. It’s a different challenge than flowers or landscapes, but the principles carry over. What makes a great floral image—composition, color, detail, clean background—matters just as much in birds and wildlife. The only difference? Your subject never holds still and has no idea you’re trying to make them look good.

I might take a hundred shots of a bird and keep just one. But when it works, it’s worth every missed frame. Keep at it—you’re clearly on the right track.
Thanks Eric - the egret shot is where our new generation of cameras with high frame rates shines. In this case I was yanking down 30 RAW frames per second and found this one as I was shuffling through the pile of images I ended up with following this egret. The downside is that I had my finger down on the shutter release for close to 5 seconds before it landed so I had just under 300 captures of this one bird to wade through to find this one. I did get a whole boatload of nice egret in flight shots out of that collection of captures but am going to need bigger disk drives sooner as a result :rolleyes:
 
Top Bottom