Great Egrets Displaying - Smith Oaks Rookery, High Island, TX - April 2021

Click on landscape oriented photos for a slightly larger view.
Go to the text following the last photo for an overview of my April birding trip to Texas.

Great Egret - Smith Oaks Rookery, High Island, TX -April 2021

Olympus E-M1X camera
150-400mm f4.5 TC lens @ 406 mm
1/2500 sec at f/5.6, ISO 320


Great Egret - Smith Oaks Rookery, High Island, TX -April 2021

Olympus E-M1X camera
150-400mm f4.5 TC lens @320 mm
1/4000 sec at f/5.6, ISO 500


Great Egret - Smith Oaks Rookery, High Island, TX -April 2021

Olympus E-M1X camera
150-400mm f4.5 TC lens @350 mm
1/4000 sec at f/5.6, ISO 500


Great Egret - Smith Oaks Rookery, High Island, TX -April 2021

Olympus E-M1X camera
150-400mm f4.5 TC lens @275 mm
1/1250 sec at f/5.6, ISO 200

The Gulf Coast of Texas is one of my favorite bird photography locations, but this was not my most productive trip. I started the drive to Texas early one morning. I stopped at a McDonalds 4 blocks from the condo for an Egg McMuffin and a cup of coffee. A car in the "pick up your order" station suddenly put his car in reverse and backed into me at the "pay for your order" station. He had received incorrect change. There was no detectable damage to my bumper. Later that day in New Mexico, the wind was blowing so much soil across the highway that my lane detector system stopped working. A little later, the density of the tumbleweeds being blown across the road was so great, the automatic braking system was activated. For the entire two weeks there were basically only 3 or 4 low tides during daylight hours. Those occurred early in the morning when, from the dike that extends 5 miles out into the gulf to protect the Galveston ship channel, the sun was behind the birds. The dike is usually one of my favorite "perches" for photographing the wading birds. The normal tidal system was in effect, of course, but the wind was blowing onto shore so strongly that the predicted low tide water levels never happened. My photos of "shore" birds were obtained from fields pretty far inland. Fortunately the High Island rookery was very active and I spent a lot of time there. On the drive back to Colorado, a rock hit the windshield and produced a crack that grew to about 24 inches in length by the time I arrived at the condo. I enjoyed the trip! it was great to get out of the condo, to listen to the wind, to measure the depth of the water covering the roads to some of my birding spots by noting how much of the legs of the Yellowlegs, Stilts, and Willets feeding in the water on the roads was exposed, and to listen to the imaginary clicks of my mirrorless camera.


David Sparks

I retired in 2005 after 40 years of research and teaching at the University of Alabama in Birmingham (24 years), the University of Pennsylvania (8 years) and the Baylor College of Medicine (8 years). Photography is my retirement hobby.

Nature photography, especially bird photography, combines a number of things that I really enjoy: bird-watching, being outdoors, photography, travel, messing about with computers, and learning new skills and concepts.  I now spend much of my time engaged in these activities.

David Sibley in the preface to The Sibley Guide to Birds wrote "Birds are beautiful, in spectacular as well as subtle ways; their colors, shapes, actions, and sounds are among the most aesthetically pleasing in nature."  My goal is to acquire images that capture the beauty and uniqueness of selected species as well as images that highlight the engaging behaviors the birds exhibit.