Posts Tagged ‘walk’

Sight & Sound – Sunday Washout

Our biweekly bird walk didn’t last very long. I got this shot of the very odd clouds overhead on the way to meet the others at the Norman Bird Sanctuary. It started spitting during our first stop and really started coming down at our second stop. By the time we got to Gooseneck Cove at Hazard Rd. we didn’t even get out of the cars. Oh well…

Photo © 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

Sunday by the Water – Salt Marsh and Surfing

Today was the biweekly bird walk, but July is birding doldrums time around here, so there wasn’t much interesting on today’s walk. Afterward I went down to Ballard Park only to be driven out by swarms of Deer Flies. But Gooseneck Cove had beauties to bestow; it was close to high tide, and in July the lush green rising out of tidal water is somehow very moving for me. No matter how harsh and bright the light, this aspect of a salt marsh always looks so much softer.



After that I went over to the Cliff Walk at Ruggles Ave. There was a high surf advisory up, and the waves looked good when Mark and I drove by Sachuest Beach on the way to the bird walk. So I hopped over to Ruggles after all my other wanderings to see what the gang was up to on the waves. I’ll have to admit they weren’t particularly awesome waves, but some people were getting some good long runs, and the surf provided enough drama for three of my kind of surfing shot – lots of splash and lots of movement. And that handsome lad in the first shot is my good buddy Marty Casey, looking every inch the cool dude that he is. Enjoy!




© 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

A New Gymnastic Routine – Feeding Nestlings

As I promised yesterday, I have some more photos from yesterday’s walk. When I went to Ballard Park after the “official” bird walk up at the Norman Bird Sanctuary, the first place i headed was to the spot where you can best see the Great Crested Flycatcher nest. I took a good 20 pictures and then moved on. When I got home I noticed that I’d captured a particular sequence – an adult Flycatcher diving into the nest to feed the young’uns! I figured that was worth a post all on its own.

Launch from the rim of the nest cavity…


… dive in head first, waving the tail feathers…

… and come back up to go fly off to find more bugs!


© 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

Sunday Bird Walk

Today was the biweekly Sunday bird walk, but since only the three of us (Mark, Bob, and I) joined walk leader Jay in the parking lot at the Norman Bird Sanctuary, Jay decided to keep the walk on NBS property. [Note: The reason for the poor attendance was the weather; it had rained overnight with more rain in the forecast. It never did rain again, but the air was very wet and thhe overcast made it a fairly dark day.]

There were lots of birds to see, but not all of my shots came out well. These are the ones that did work out well. Top left, one of many Cedar Waxwings in a Juneberry tree pigging out on the berries. Top right, a baby bunny on one of the trails. Bottom, a Turkey hen with some of her poults; when they all emerged from the tall grass we counted 10. Sorry for the quality of this shot, but I couldn’t pass up showing you our Wild Turkey encounter!

After the walk Mark, Bob and I headed down to Third Beach and its salt marsh. We saw a female Piping Plover sitting on her nest (well protected by a cage that lets Plovers in and out but keeps predators – and clumsy humans – at bay; these are endangered birds), a Short-billed Dowitcher, and a couple of Black-bellied Plovers, all in the salt marsh. Unfortunately, they were in binocular range but out of range of the camera. On the beach, though, a crowd of birds came flying up from over the water. There were a bunch of Sanderlings, a Semipalmated Plover, and this prize of the day, a Dunlin in breeding plumage.

And as is usual on bird walk Sunday, I finished out the day down on Gooseneck Cove, where I caught this Mallard/American Black Duck hybrid swimming serenely along in the soft light of a damp and overcast day.


© 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

A Very Curious Hawk, and Some Music

Our biweekly bird walk took us to Miantonomi Park on the North End of Newport; it’s a treasure trove of migratory songbirds in Spring, although this week in April is still a tad early to get much action. Still, it was a good walk, and at one point we came across this older male Red-tailed Hawk, who stayed on his branch even when we walked right under him. From his expressions, I think he was trying to figure out what we were and what we were up to.

Just for the heck of it, I thought I’d include the song playlist I have in the sidebar here in this post, too. Since I listen to a lot of Blues on other media (mostly radio), I don’t have much in my personal CD collection. But I have some treasures in my collection, and I thought I’d put a few of them together as a playlist on my DivShare account. This is some of the music that gets me going!

Photos & text © 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

The Day After the Storm

I took a walk down the Cliff Walk this morning. The seas were pretty rough, but not really surf-worthy, despite the guy I got below. There were only three people out there, and in the hour that I hung around that was the only run anybody made. Still, that was some rough water!




© 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

This just in: Apparently Scott Brown is still pretending that Rachel Maddow is after his Senate seat so he can raise more money. Rachel finally said “enough’s enough” and is calling him out on it:

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Scott, if we weren’t already convinced you were a moron, this oughta do the trick!

Spring Birds

Yesterday may have been the Vernal Equinox, but today was the first full day of Spring. We had our biweekly Sunday bird walk today, and again we stayed on the Norman Bird Sanctuary property rather than go a-visiting elsewhere. Lots of bird song going on; the woods and fields were noisy with it. We saw lots of Song Sparrows, Red-winged Blackbirds, and Cardinals, along with a few White-throated Sparrows, and heard (but couldn’t quite spot) quite a few Carolina Wrens. Down by the old flooded quarry we spotted a bunch of Yellow-rumped Warblers and Gold-crowned Kinglets busily feeding on the newly-hatched bugs by the stagnant water. Plus we got a big surprise: down at the Red Maple Pond we spotted 5 Wood Ducks and 2 Green-winged Teal. Unfortunately they got wind of us before we could get in camera range and took off, and I wasn’t fast enough on the trigger to get shots of them in flight. Oh well… And of course all the rest of the birds we spotted were either out of camera range or moving too fast to get a good shot.

As is usual for me, after the bird walk I wandered down to Ballard Park and Gooseneck Cove. The Cove was practically deserted except for some stray Mallards and American Black Ducks, but in Ballard Park I was hearing lots of Red-winged Blackbirds and seeing lots of Robins. But most prolific and noisy were the Song Sparrows and the Tufted Titmice. And yes, here I got pictures – Song Sparrow below left, Tufted Titmouse below right.

And just to finish this post off in seasonal style. let’s have a rousing chorus of George Harrison’s “Here Comes the Sun”. I even found a video with the lyrics for those of you young’uns who weren’t around when the Beatles walked the Earth along with the dinosaurs and us old hippies.

Photos & text © 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

Walking the Harbor Waterfront

So… It’s the Vernal Equinox, the temps are in the lower 60s (15º – 17ºC), a slight breeze out of the SW to keep it from being too warm, and a bright sunny sky. A perfect day for a walk. Unfortunately, I had errands in town so I couldn’t do a nature walk, but a walk down the Newport Harbor waterfront from north to south would fit the bill just right.

I started out on the Van Zandt Pier on Washington St., just under the Newport/Pell Bridge, the northernmost end of the harbor.

And then swivel to the left and shoot south toward the Goat Island Causeway. By the way, those are all private docks; some people just have to rub it in!

Down at the southern end of Washington St. is the State Pier. You get a good view of the fishing docks at the pier from a little postage stamp-sized park at the corner of Washington St. and Long Wharf.

Along Long Wharf, which forms the north end of the inner harbor, are inexpensive docks for local fishermen. This small floating dock houses a little one-man lobster operation.

There are too many tourists in the way along the rest of the route down the harbor, so we don’t get back to the waterfront until King Park at the southern end of the harbor. But you get a nice view looking west from the baseball fields, looking across the park’s waterfront walkway to the Ida Lewis Yacht Club and Fort Adams beyond.

And with that, it’s time to leave the water and go do errands. You can hang out here by the water if you like, though. Enjoy!

© 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

Hugging Trees in Ballard Park

In a walk through Ballard Park today I decided to take eye-level macro shots of some of my favorite trees in the park, sort of what your eyes would see if you were hugging a tree.

One of the Quaking Aspens in the grove in the quarry.

The Pin Oak that sits out by itself in the quarry.

One of the Norway Maples that hang over the Vernal Pond in the quarry.

A Black Cherry tree along the Valley Trail near the puddingstone boulder.

The big old Yew tree on the Valley Trail.

© 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

Baby It’s Cold Outside!

On today’s biweekly Sunday bird walk we went chasing a King Eider. Thursday somebody reported seeing a male off Brenton Point to the RI birding network, so Friday I went looking. Apparently so did a bunch of other people, because that night’s RI Birds newsletter had a bunch of us reporting sightings. When I saw him he was a good quarter mile (.4 km) offshore, and was just barely identifiable in the binoculars. So when my friend Mark and I turned up in the parking lot of the Norman Bird Sanctuary this morning we pretty much knew today’s trip would be to Brenton Point. Jay, the walk leader, also suggested we head to Easton’s Beach afterward as somebody reported seeing an immature Iceland Gull there.

Let me tell you, it was pretty chilly out there. It was in the teens slowly warming into the 20s while we were out there (-8º to -5º C), and a brisk wind that brought the wind chill down into the single digits (-16º to -13º C). Yeah, it was chilly. We never found the birds we were looking for, but I thought I’d take some shots of the ice down at Brenton Point to give you, my faithful readers, a chill and send you running for the hot chocolate! [Note: Those are some old iron stanchions out on one of the rocky points out on Brenton Point in that top photo, and yes, that's ice covering them. I did say it was cold out there!]


Usually I head for Ballard Park and Gooseneck Cove after the Sunday bird walks, but two hours out in that cold was as much as I was willing to subject myself to, so Mark dropped me off at my place on his way home. What to do, what to do with only a few ocean shots and home a good 3 or 4 hours earlier than usual. Well, how about some macro still lifes with some of my shell collection? Good idea! Staying in an oceanic theme but taken indoors on a cold day.


And of course you know with that title that I was gonna have to do this; my favorite version of Frank Loesser’s “Baby, It’s Cold Outside”, Louis Armstrong and Velma Middleton doing a hilarious live take (I only wish I knew why the person who posted this kept using Louis and Ella album covers in the slide show!). Enjoy!

Photos & text © 2010 by A. Roy Hilbinger

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