The Natural Outdoors: photos.


Here are photographs I’ve taken, over the past few years, of birds and other animals, scenic vistas, and an occasional oddball or two. Just scroll on down, they’re in no particular order. This page won’t be changing much. For my most recent, just look through the posts on the front page.

October 17, 2022: Just so’s they’re all in one place, here are the best of the photos I’ve taken over the summer of 2022, the older at the top and proceeding to the latest at the end of this page update.

Carpenter Bee in wild sweet pea
Common Whitetail dragonfly
Turkey Vulture
Pacific Chorus Frog
Red-shouldered Hawk
California Mule Deer
Evening Grosbeak
Leucistic Brewer’s Blackbird
Black-crowned Night Heron
Common Merganser
Double-crested Cormorant
Green Heron, juvenile
Great Blue Heron
Western Grebe
Western Pond Turtle
Black Phoebe
Raccoon and Great Blue Heron
Red-shouldered Hawk
Loggerhead Shrike
Bald Eagle

July 8, 2022: This bird deserves special place so I’m adding it to my photos page. This is the Cedar Waxwing, a big surprise for me to see at Dellinger’s Pond, or anywhere around Quincy, because this is the first time I’ve ever seen it around here. It’s not uncommon or rare especially, it’s just that I’ve been looking and never seeing. It’s not that I didn’t see because I wasn’t looking, I can tell you. A great treat for me.

June 15, 2022: This addition is a “lifer” for me. I’ve been after a photo of this bird since returning to live in Quincy in 2018. Today, I got it.

WESTERN TANAGER

This was also a one-of-a-kind, just the day before the Western Tanager. Although by no means the first Wood Duck I’ve photographed, this is the first “eclipse” male Wood Duck for my camera.

And the wonders kept coming. At Dellinger’s Pond, same as the Wood Duck:

Gray Fox

From the archives:

Bald Eagle
Northern Shrike
Black-headed Grosbeak
Great Egret
Ferruginous Hawk
Northern Harrier
Common Goldeneye
Cinnamon Teal
Canada Goose
Bufflehead Duck

I first started “serious” hobby photography after my retirement at age 62 in 2016. I bought my first hobbyist camera, a Nikon Coolpix L830, to take with me and record my ventures and experiences during two stays in Mazatlan, Mexico, first for a month in 2016 and then for a six-month “winter” in 2017-2018. Since then I’ve upgraded my camera twice and I now use a Nikon Coolpix P950, which I’ve affectionately named “The Beast”.

“The Beast”, so-called because it’s a hand full.

Mazatlan was a blast! Herewith a few photos from there.

View of Mazatlan from El Faro lighthouse. My apartment was situated in between the tall gray building and the tall orange building to lower-right of center, in the Centro Historico district.
Pipevine Swallowtail Butterfly
Double-crested Cormorant
A very small Gecko, no more than 2″ long.
A dolphin in the bay.
Plaza Machado (Christmas time) at night. About two blocks from my apartment.
Oh, I partied on occasion. In case you’re not sure, I’m the one with the camera case. Muy bueno vatos y vatas, mi amigos y amigas.
Typical beach scene.
A very small crab in a tide pool.
Sandpiper
Harlequin Moth, Hyalurga vinosa

That’s enough (for now) about Mazatlan. All I’ll say further at this time is if you’ve never been there you should go if you ever get the chance. But I’d recommend you only go during the winter. Summers there are often very rainy and very hot. Winter in Mazatlan, though, is as close to paradise as I’ve ever come.

I’ll pause here for a moment to say a few words about my photography. I’ve chosen to concentrate on birds for very simple reasons: of all wildlife they’re probably the easiest to photograph. No matter where you go, you’ll almost certainly find birds, often in good numbers and diversity. Some birds are more challenging to photograph than others; some like to perch out in the open and stay still, others are much more elusive and flighty, or are only seen at a distance. Some are simply rare or uncommon for a particular area. Of all birds I’ve ever photographed right here around Quincy, CA, this one is considered very uncommon. I just got lucky, and it was a couple hundred yards away as it was. Since this photograph, taken October 15, 2020, out in the Leonhardt Ranch Learning Landscape, I have not seen this bird around here again.

White-tailed Kite

Moving on, I’m going to pick a few of my “best” or “favorite” shots, and I hope you enjoy them as much as I do. There will be a few other-than-birds, but like I say it’s just not that often that I encounter them.

Red-shouldered Hawk
Prairie Falcon
Merlin
Sandhill Crane
Sandhill Crane courting display
Wood Duck
Pied-billed Grebe
Belted Kingfisher

Change of pace, a couple of mammals and reptiles, and one unusual arachnid:

Gray Fox
Striped Skunk
California Black Bear
Western Pond Turtle
Red-eared Slider
Solifugid, or Sun Spider. Not a true spider.

Back to a mix of birds and mammals. Most, but not all, were photographed near or around Quincy:

Evening Grosbeak
Red-breasted Sapsucker
Great Blue Heron
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Pronghorn (not a true Antelope). Sierra Valley, eastern Plumas County.
Hooded Merganser
American Beaver
Cedar Waxwing, Reno, NV
Cedar Waxwing
Coyote
Mountain Chickadee. You’ve probably heard this one but maybe you’ve never seen it. This is the renowned “cheese-burger” bird.
Sora, a very elusive and uncommon bird for Quincy. At Dellinger’s Pond, May 2021
Spotted Sandpiper. Graeagle, May 2021
Olive-sided Flycatcher. Graeagle, May 2021
Wilson’s Snipe
Green Heron. Another uncommon visitor to the American Valley area. Dellinger’s Pond, Quincy, April 2022.
Black-crowned Night Heron, yet another uncommon visitor. Photographed just two days after the Green Heron, at Dellinger’s Pond.
Nashville Warbler
Townsend’s x Hermit hybrid Warbler

A few more, and you’re done with this page. Most of the birds and other animals on this page were photographed in 2021, and I’ve left several species out. Since these photographs I’ve improved my technique somewhat and also my processing. The Spotted Towhee, below, is indicative of this on-going evolution in my wildlife photography. It’s just a fact of hobbyist photography, however, that not every single photo is going to be a stunner. Luck plays the major role, having the lighting happen to be just right, the bird (or other animal) striking just the right pose, and most of all just being in the right place at the right time.

Spotted Towhee, January 2022, Dellinger’s Pond, Quincy, CA
Ash-throated Flycatcher
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Black Phoebe
Orange-crowned Warbler
Northern Shoveler
Tundra Swan
Rough-legged Hawk
Western Meadowlark
Yellow Warbler
Wild Turkey