Our longest-standing birding "white whale" was slain last week in the Everglades. After more than a decade of earnest searching in any known hide-out or reported location, Andy and I finally saw a Smooth-Billed Ani. Mind you, this is a small, plain black bird, about the same size as a blackbird or a grackle, with its only outstanding feature being a rather heavy black beak... so you're probably wondering what the fuss was about. I don't know that I can explain it either. It's just that it had eluded us for so many years, and we deliberately went out of our way so many times in hopes of finding it, after so-and-so birder geek reported one here or such-and-such guide book said there was good habitat there. Even this time, we had to go to the same spot on the Anhinga Trail on 3 separate days before it showed itself. And then all of a sudden, there it was, calmly preening like it was no big thing after all.
The Ani
On a happier note, we also saw many other cool birds in the Everglades and Keys on our trip- enjoy these photos Andy took!
Anhinga drying its wings
A fritillary of some sort
2 comments:
Congratulations! Considering the dwindling population of Ani, you were lucky. By the way Andy, your photos get better every year. Great shots!
Grandma Chris
Mazel Tov!! I really enjoyed your info about the ani -- always wondered what they looked like (it's a common crossword puzzle answer that I've used countless times).
Andy's pix are gorgeous. I especially love the Great Egret and his reflection in the water. Almost looks like a painting -- beautiful!
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