Birding Everglades & The Keys-South Florida bird photography Part 1-Nearly eaten by Croc!
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- Опубліковано 20 лип 2024
- In Part 1 of Sparky's Florida birding adventure, he takes his Canon R5 and Canon 100-500mm lens to South Florida...IN SUMMER! Birding and bird photography stops in the South Miami, the Keys, and the Everglades include:
Brewer Park-Miami (parrot roost-Red Masked Parakeet, Chestnut-fronted Macaw)
Black Point Park & Marina (Mangrove Cuckoo, Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, Common Myna)
John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park-Key Largo (Magnificent Frigatebird)
Big Pine Key (White-crowned Pigeon, Key Deer, Gray Kingbird, Black-whiskered Vireo)
Fort Zachary Taylor S.P.-Key West (Roseate Tern, Least Tern, Sandwich Tern, Great White Heron, Common Ground Dove)
Key West Botanical Gardens (Magnificent Frigatebird)
Flamingo Boat Launch-Everglades National Park (American Crocodile, West Indian Manatee)
Part 2 will cover Florida from Miami up to Jupiter and inland to Johnathon Dickenson State Park and more. - Домашні улюбленці та дикі тварини
That's a beautiful place for birding. I've seen 214 species of birds on my life list.
That’s a great start! Every new bird is a treasure!
Great Video. Very nicely done!
Thanks, Matt! You really helped me get a couple lifers :-)
Awesome stuff Sparky
Thanks Tomas! Hope your major project is going well
Hi sparky. At least you got the tern as it's your tern to make the sandwich. Get it. Great videos. Best regards from James in Scotland.
Ha! Good one! Thanks for watching all the way over in Scotland, James!
Beautiful area and birds in Florida and loved getting to see it without having to experience the humidity. Great video as usual.
Thank you Zephalu! I do not miss the humidity!
Nice video. Miami resident here, if you come down again Miami Springs has quite a number of different species of birds. My favorite bird is the Osprey and in the Flamingo part of Everglades National Park they have a nest where you shot the images of the crocodile, I don't know if they were there when you went. A little more northwest there is the Audubon Corkscrew Swamp that is really nice as well.
Hi Waldo! Nice to hear from a Miami resident. I sure could’ve used more local intel for sure. I did not see osprey at Flamingo on this trip. Thanks for watching the video and part two will have my birding in the areas north and west of Miami.
PS I have been to Corkscrew Swamp multiple times and also love it! Just didn’t have time to get to the gulf coast on this trip. Thanks for watching the videos!
Awesome, we did a lot of the same parks last February!!
Very cool Collette! You probably saw many of the same birds but had a few that weren’t around in summer.
My sister and I are big time birders and really enjoy your videos😊 We are trying to plan a visit to the
Sax Zim Bog this Nov/Dec!!!
Hi Beth, best if you can wait until December. We don’t even open until Saturday, December 2. Of course, late December through early March is best but please come when you can!
@@SparkyStensaas Thank you for letting us know, happy birding😊
Hola: Gracias de nuevo por el video,ya sabes aprendiendo conductas y curiosidades que me sirven de mucho gracias a ti..😊
Gracias Pedro! I love sharing natural history!
Another good video Sparky. Congrats on 650. Not sure I could handle birding in Florida in the summer. Although it’s on its way to 98 degrees this afternoon at my house here in Minnesota 😀
Thanks, Paul! I won’t be birding again in Florida in summer anytime soon :-)
Fortunately, the DULUTH area has avoided much of the big heat waves. East winds off the Lake have been our friend this summer.
That's funny when we visited the states we also used those 'cooler' bags to keep our food cold/fresh, they worked well. I think we may even still have them somewhere cos we brought them back to the UK with us.😆
Ha! Yes, I think they would have worked much better if the temperatures had never gotten below 83°. I also brought mine home and I’ve been using them here as well.
Errrmmm we had ours in Death Valley in temps of 50C@@SparkyStensaas
@@shaunferguson8782 wow!!
I sat at that exact same table in Brewer Park waiting for the parrots. Then all at once they came roaring in, hung out in the trees for a few minutes and then moved on.
If you put the heat on in the car, as your getting out, and put your camera/bins/scope in front of the vents, to warm the lenses, they won't fog up in the high humidity.
Thanks for the comments waterbuck! I really do enjoy the parrots, parakeets, and macaws, even if they’re non-native.
And thanks for the tip about the heat! Up here in northern Minnesota we usually have to worry about the opposite effect… Getting out of a warm car at 20 below zero :-)
I have so enjoyed your birding videos! Thanks.
Thank you Ann! More to come!
Another great video, Sparky, with a lot of nifty species, some I’ve seen, some I’ve photographed, and some I’d never heard of before. Well done.
Thanks, Al! Nifty species is right! Always fun to get to a biome that is so different from our beloved North Woods.
Love those Halloween Pennants, super photogenic. I see a lot of those in my local swamps. Never heard of those tree snails! Pretty interesting. Nevermind the array of bird species I wasn't even aware were in America haha.
And man, gotta be careful with those crocs!! They've made it this long on the planet by being resilient and highly intelligent creatures. It was likely stalking you for a long while and slowly getting closer. Probably a good thing those gentlemen warned you!
You are absolutely right about the crocodile! I kind of get shivers now just thinking about it. Especially stupid move on my part since I knew crocodiles were in the area.
Glad you enjoyed the video and some info about the rare birds in South Florida. I agree with you about the Halloween penance as well! Thanks for watching. Part two coming soon.
Looks like a great trip. Awesome pics and footage. Thanks!
Thanks Kevin! It certainly looks more comfortable than it was. The heat was downright, oppressive, and miserable.
Florida Keys are great area to bird. Love the White-crowned Pigeons. I remember seeing lots of them in Key Deer National Refuge. Thanks for the video, enjoyed watching 👍
Exactly where I saw them, Thomas! Happy birding!
Good one, Sparky. Some beautiful critters there you photographed. Myself, I would probably go there in the winter. Keep up making these great videos. Most enjoyable.👍👍
Hi Terry, April is really the best birding month but winter is very good for a lot of species as well. And a nice relief from Minnesota winter!
Great video. Love the beautiful pigeons.
Thank you RoseGrace! The pigeons are cool!
Come to Crystal River to see and swim with Manatees, We also have Skimmers, Limpkins and Kites, Eagles, Barred Owls, Pileated Woodpeckers along the rivers and shores.
I would love to do that!! It is now on my list :-) thanks for the recommendation Leslie!
Great to revisit some of the places I went in 2019 - I really love US birding (being British) can't wait to come back!
That’s fantastic JVP! You’ll probably recognize some of the sites in part two as well :-)
Great video, when I was younger I spent some time in the Keys chasing Tarpon, I wish now I would have paid more attention to the birds!
Well, I’m sure you had some great adventures fishing as well! Thanks, Andrew.
Congrats on your 650th bird!
Thanks Shaun! I really haven’t done as much listing since I had kids and really gotten into photography so it’s kind of fun to add up my numbers again.
Sparky - have you ever tried our home-grown 3M Ultrathon insect repellent? I've had very good luck with it in the BWCAW. Also, we used to live next to St Croix Bluffs Regional Park near Afton and you might want to consider an outing there if you haven't been yet. The location along the St Croix River just up from the Mississippi seemed to bring in quite a variety of birds.
Thanks for the insect repellent tip, George! I will definitely try it out. I have been to the St. River Valley, but not that specific park. I will check it out!
bro went to Florida and instead of going to Publix he said "whole foods, fancy one"
I like both!
at 4:58 interesting that the Yellow-crowned Night Heron is missing a toe ... wonder what happened to cause that
Ha! I hadn’t noticed that! Good catch Tom !