Jordan Lake. It is often said the devil is in the details. In this case the details are in the bald eagle. I often tell people if you can’t see a bald eagle: look for bright yellow feet or maybe all you will get is a glimpse of a bright yellow beak. Captain Doug and I came across this eagle last week and he sure put on a beautifully detailed launch.

bright beak
launch
bright yellow feet

Please be very careful and patient. It will be a while before the water levels come back down at Jordan Lake. You can check on their website for when they reopen. I’ll try to also make a notice here when it does. All of you stay safe.

🌩️ Rolling into Wednesday with a surprise ONE-DAY flash sale! Take 25% off all artwork today only.

If you’ve had your eye on something, my online gallery is stocked and ready. Get it now before these virtual clouds part again! ☀️

⚡CODE: STORM

https://www.docellensnaturephotography.com

Featured:

“Killdeer Launch”

I usually hear a killdeer before I catch sight of it. Their sharp kill-dee, kill-dee is quiet distinctive.

Jordan Lake. I had never seen a spider web which had anchor lines that looked like they were perforated to tear the line apart. I sent my photo over to the NC Museum of Natural Sciences, Ask a Naturalist tab. The entomologist told me that the web was built by an orb weaver and, get this, those thickened areas along the anchor lines – those dashes are spider silk tufts placed there by the spider as bird flags! So that birds will see the web and not fly through and destroy it. Who would’ve thought! Nature bedazzles me again.

Jordan Lake. I was working my way through the trees on the shoreline when I came upon this great egret. I asked myself: is the egret interested in his own reflection or more than likely is there a fish on the other side of that reflection.