Jordan Lake. “Oh oh oh,” said the juvenile green heron. “Mom and Dad said to be very careful around creatures that have one big eye right where a beak should be. Oh oh oh what do I do? Let’s see. Mom and Dad said mostly these one-eyed creatures were just being curious and didn’t want to eat me. I think I will just slip right on past and go back to looking for fish.”
Which is exactly what the youngster did and I spent a delightful 10 minutes photographing him in the early morning light trying to find a fish.

Jordan Lake Dam, July 13, 2021. I was tracking this new fisher to the dam this morning when he crossed between me and most of the rising sun. Suddenly this fledgling male osprey was a sepia image somehow brought to the present by my digital camera but relying on the experience of yesteryear’s fragile film. The osprey was composed of feathers, sharp talons, utter concentration and incredible beauty. I thanked him for blessing my day.

Jordan Lake: as we all know all too well the heat has been almost unbearable of late. Osprey parents, when it gets hot, make a shade producing umbrella out of themselves. Osprey nests are out in the open so there’s no shade producing tree branches above them. That means when the babies get very hot, as this one has, the parent will spread out its wings and let the chick shelter underneath of them. What a marvelous display of parental responsibility and ingenuity. In this case it is mom that’s making the shade. Dads do too, but I more often see the moms being shade trees – probably because mom is bigger than dad and can shelter the chicks easier.

Jordan Lake: Captain Doug and I aren’t sure that the youngster’s flight this morning was his very first, but it is a fair guess that he couldn’t have been flying for more than a day or so because he wasn’t seen flying yesterday. Enjoy the young male as he leaves his startled sisters behind and goes to explore the world!