by Rich Leighton | May 9, 2018 | Birds, Florida Nature Photography, Interesting Nature Facts
Sandhill cranes mate for life, and have one brood a year. Chicks are able to leave the nest 8 hours after hatching, and stay with their parents for 9-10 months including migration. MORE PHOTOS OF CRANES & LIMPKINS MORE INTERESTING NATURE FACTS Interesting Nature...
by Rich Leighton | Apr 29, 2018 | Birds, Florida Nature Photography, Interesting Nature Facts, Natural History
Corvids are one of the world’s smartest birds. These include ravens, crows, jays and magpies. In fact, the American crow can not only recognize and remember a human’s face, but can teach other crows to recognize a specific person they haven’t seen...
by Rich Leighton | Mar 20, 2018 | Birds, Florida Nature Photography, Interesting Nature Facts, Natural History
The only raptor in North America that dives into the water after fish, the osprey is the sole bird of prey to feed only on fish. Weighing only 3 pounds, this strong flyer with a 6 foot wingspan can carry a trout of 2 or 3 pounds. The osprey’s only natural enemy,...
by Rich Leighton | Dec 7, 2017 | American Southwest, Arizona, Birds, NANP, Natural History, Nature & Wildlife, Nature Photography
This male black-tailed gnatcatcher and his mate weren’t very happy when I peered out of my tent in the bright Sonoran Desert morning in the Ajo Mountains of Southern Arizona’s Pima County. I was scolded almost the entire time as I packed up my camera...
by Rich Leighton | Jun 29, 2017 | Birds, Florida, NANP, Natural History, Nature & Wildlife, Nature Photography, Photography
The anhinga is one of the most strange, beautiful and ancient birds of The Gulf Coast region of the Southeastern United States. When North America was split in half roughly 100 to 40 million years ago by a great inland sea called the Western Interior Seaway (...
by Rich Leighton | May 31, 2017 | Birds, California, NANP, Natural History, Nature & Wildlife, Nature Photography, Photography
I’m adding this set of photos a few months after I made them in California because I just wasn’t positively sure what exactly species I was looking at until a very experienced birder friend of mine on Facebook pointed out all the reasons that this is a...
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