Maybe a desert isnβt the obvious place to look for bird reflections, or indeed reflections of any kind. Deserts are dry, no? And the Atacama Desert in Chile is especially so. In fact, itβs the driest non-polar desert in the world, and has had no significant rainfall for 400 years.
And yet, the shallow waters of its barren salt flats offer picture-perfect reflections of feeding flamingos; an ideal place to start a short journey to find some reflections of birds for Lisa’s Bird Weekly challenge.
As well as the Andean Flamingos pictured above, we found others enjoying the rich feeding at the Salar de Atacama, including Andean Avocets β¦
β¦ and a Baird’s Sandpiper.
I’ll share more about our visit to the Salar de Atacama in a future post. It’s a stunningly beautiful place! Meanwhile elsewhere in the Atacama, at the Putana Wetlands, we saw we saw Giant Coots, Andean Geese and Ruddy or Andean Ducks with their distinctive blue bills reflected in the muddy waters.
Itβs harder to get a good reflection in the sea, but in a quiet rock pool on the beach at Ngala Lodge in the Gambia I was able to photograph this Whimbrel mirrored in the water that glows copper red from the reflections of the low cliffs that line the beach.
This White-crowned Plover wading in the waters of the Chobe River in Botswana has found a tasty insect.
Closer to home
My remaining photos were taken closer to home, starting with a swan on Langham Pond at Runnymede.
And hereβs another swan leading a pair of youngsters on a tour of the lake at Syon Park.
Here are a couple of Tufted Ducks photographed at Boston Manor Park. I love the elegance of their black and white markings.
Also at Boston Manor is this Grey Heron, fishing from an overgrown islet in the middle of the lake.
Iβll finish on the River Thames, first with a pair of Egyptian Geese at Strand-on-the-Green. Yes, we are a long way from Egypt, but these birds, introduced into England in the 17th century, became popular exotica on private estates and subsequently escaped into the wild. Today the RSPB estimates there are around 1,100 breeding pairs in the UK.
And finally another Grey Heron in Richmond-on-Thames. Like many of us at the moment, he seems to be having a bad hair day!
I’m also sharing these images for Cee’s CFFC Birds theme.
And I’ll finish with a puzzle for you. All but one of the photos above is a genuine reflection. One however was manipulated with an app, Mirror Labs. Can you tell which?
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ramblingranger
Lovely bird post. I especially like the B&W of the heron that you closed with.
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Dianne, I’m glad you like my rather stroppy heron π
Anonymous
The plover would not have been my guess so I would have been wrong. All are great reflections.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you
Albatz Travel Adventures
Love the title, the birds and their reflections. You certainly have captured some very unique birds, many of which I have never seen before!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you so much π
Cee Neuner
Congratulations! I have chosen your post to be featured on CFFC.
https://ceenphotography.com/2021/03/30/cffc-rusty-or-decayed/
I hope your week is off to a great start.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Cee, that’s lovely of you π Yes, we’re having an unseasonably warm spell here and we’ve been out enjoying the sunshine!
wetanddustyroads
Such beautiful pictures of all the different birds … the swans are my favourite (ok, and the flamingo’s!)
I had no idea which photo was the ‘doctored’ one – I was thinking maybe the last one of the Grey Heron (when I found out it was not this one, I can probably vote for the Heron as the winning photo!)
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Corna, I’m happy you enjoyed these photos π
Lisa Coleman
OMG! That was my first reaction to your photos thi week. I thought it was the last Heron photo so you did a really great job with the Plover. I will have a difficult time choosing one bird for the round up. They are gorgeous! I need to get out more! π
Sarah Wilkie
So glad you enjoyed them Lisa π I’ll be interested to see which one you settle on for your round-up!
Lisa Coleman
Iβll be interested to see which one I settle on too. Sometimes I know when I see it during the week and often times, like your post I donβt because they all speak to me. π
Sarah Wilkie
π
Teresa
Such photogenic birds you have!
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks Teresa!
Fergy.
Hello Sarah,
Fergy here and I still can’t answer you with my WordPress ID, you must have banned me!
Beautiful birds and outstanding photography as always.
I just spent about 20 minutes trying to figure out the doctored one (before I read the comments) and I would never have got it.
It is worth considering how easily images can be manipulated, Governments have been doing it for years. I watched a fascinating documentary about it in the BBC iPlayer a couple of months ago. Stalin was a master at “airbrushing” people out after he had had them killed and it was all done manually back then. Scary to think what they can do with computers these days.
Sarah Wilkie
Hi Fergy and thanks for jumping through the necessary hoops to comment π I do have a comment waiting to be moderated on my recent post from the Bulgaria meet and I’m wondering if that is you with your WP account? Perhaps if so, when I approve it you will find you can comment in the future, but if it is you then I would have expected to be able to see so! But don’t take it personally please – Nancy (cnango on VT) has a similar problem!
That documentary sounds fascinating, I will have to seek it out. Did you ever see Woody Allen’s Zelig? He manages to insert himself into archival newsreal footage – really clever! This sort of thing proves that the camera can indeed lie and has been doing so almost since photography was invented! I have an early example in one of my other posts, https://www.toonsarah-travels.blog/friendly-friday-photo-challenge-smoke-mirrors/
lisaonthebeach
Wow Sarah, what cool and unique bird photos! I simply can’t believe how many different birds there are around the world. Wish I could travel more and find some of them! I love your photos! β€β€
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much Lisa, I’m so glad you like them π It was travelling that got me interested in photographing birds as there are so many wonderful ones in different parts of the world!
Andrea R Huelsenbeck
I’m going to guess the plover, just because it’s such a cool, wavy reflection. Wonderful bird photos.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Andrea, and yes, you are correct, it’s the plover π He did have a bit of a reflection but I decided to boost it with the app. To be honest I thought it was more obvious than it must have been to others!
Oh, the Places We See
Fantastic collection of reflections — I’m especially drawn to the first and second shots, but all are masterful. How fun to see double through your eyes!
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you so much π ‘Seeing double’ – I like that!
Rose Vettleson
Beautiful photography of such colorful birds. If I were to guess which one is an app reflection I would think maybe, Egyptian Geese on the Thames? Only because of shadows in the water. But itβs really difficult for me to tell. This definitely will have me second guessing the βnaturalnessβ of all future photos.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Rose π I’m sorry but no, it’s not that one! And this will also have me considering just how easily an app can fool people π
restlessjo
Love the sandpiper, and the swans π π
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks Jo π I think the sandpiper is my favourite too, after the flamingos – he has such an alert expression!
Tracey
Excellent photos! It reminds me of our trip to Tanzania where we got some very nice reflection photos of flamingos (which we weren’t even expecting to see, but were plentiful.)
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks Tracey! We only saw a handful of very distant flamingos in Tanzania so I was thrilled to get these much better shots in Chile π
thehungrytravellers.blog
Beautiful shots, love the reflections
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you very much π
Cee Neuner
Oh what beautiful birds and reflections you are showing off. π
Sarah Wilkie
Thanks so much Cee!
maristravels
Great reflections, and wonderful birds. You really captured life on the water.
Sarah Wilkie
Thank you Mari π
margaret21
The tufted ducks? Or maybe the grey heron. The water is particularly photogenic – suspiciously so. Great photos though..
Sarah Wilkie
Sorry Margaret, no, neither of those! I’ll let you know the right answer in a few days, when others have had a chance to guess π Thanks for the nice words about the photos π