To finish off the trip photos, some of the local birds. No, the kind that fly. These chaps posed so nicely, I just had to post them here.
Monday, June 02, 2008
.
Birds from the trip
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Comments from a mutant slime-snake-monkey-person.
Barry Leiba
New York, United States
My work-related web page: http://internetmessagingtechnology.org
(Please see the note at the bottom of this page.)
.
To finish off the trip photos, some of the local birds. No, the kind that fly. These chaps posed so nicely, I just had to post them here.
If you're new here, or want to see the author's selections of some highlights from the archives, click here. If you'd like to browse the archives by month or category, use the archive lists:
Copyright © 2006–2011 Barry Leiba; all rights reserved unless otherwise noted.
I am a computer software engineer/architect, and I may sometimes write about things related to the work that I do. Notwithstanding that, whatever company I'm working for at the time has no connection to this web log or the writing herein, and what I say, no matter the topic, comes from me alone and does not represent the opinions or policies of my employer.
Comment previewing
I use comment moderation to avoid comment-spam and nastiness, not to filter opinions. I intend to publish all reasonable comments, whether or not they agree with me. I will not publish any comment that is unduly flaming or that uses foul language, whether or not it agrees with me. You may contact me about an entry by making a comment and telling me that it is a private comment, in which case I will not publish it. If you want a response, include your email address. For privacy reasons I won’t publish a comment that contains someone’s email address.
Unfortunately, because of comment spam I am no longer accepting anonymous comments. You may use a Google account or OpenID with a pseudonym, but you will have to log in to comment. I would rather not do this, but... blame the spammers.
3 comments:
Top left: White-crowned Sparrow
Top right: Juvenile Western Scrub Jay
Lower left: Ferruginous Hawk (??? hawks are difficult to identify at the best of times, but the beak would seem to clinch it. Perhaps.)
Lower right: Juvenile Western Gull
Thanks, Ray; I've set the "alt" descriptions on the photos accordingly.
Oh lovely.. I do so like the birdies :)
Post a Comment