An hour north of me is another magical place. I keep track of it on Facebook, where people, dedicated to photographing the wonders there post images and after periods of time away I am always itching to go back and see for myself.
I always try to arrive before sunrise, to witness the Shiawasee National Wildlife Refuge waking up. Sometimes it’s very noisy, but last Friday it was quiet, no flocks of cranes flying over, just some little birds and a couple swans.

But the moon was coming up and that kept me company as I waited for daylight. I was there to see the cinnamon teal I’d been hearing about. A bird that doesn’t frequent our part of the country had been sighted regularly, in a pond right next to the parking lot.

Just as the sun rose a car roared into the parking lot, and a woman, dressed in waders and lugging a camera with a huge lens eased her way into the water beneath the viewing platform. I was still in the car.

As the light brightened I figured if she was that prepared I didn’t want to disturb her or any potential shots, and I avoided the viewing platform in favor of the parking lot itself. And guess what? The cinnamon teal was there, with his lady friend.

But the light was still low and I was far away. Still…I have proof that I saw him and that was enough for me. I left her to her project and started down the road to the trails, intent on what other wonders I could see.

There was this female merganser swimming all by herself in the ditch along the road. I wondered where her mate was.

And this killdeer was be-bopping along in the wet grasses. He didn’t really want his picture taken but I got what I could.

Mostly I was just happy to be out there in the golden early morning light. But I kept thinking about that teal…and when another car pulled in and a guy clompped his way up the viewing platform I figured I had as much right to be there as either of them and I walked back, tiptoed up the viewing platform and saw that the teal, and his lady were nowhere to be found.

I wasn’t surprised, with all the commotion. So I took a couple pictures and walked on back down the road. I was kind of disappointed that I didn’t have a clear shot of the teal. But I had a couple of tree swallows dive bomb me. They were so fast I didn’t get a good focus, but it was kind of cool.

I resigned myself to the fact I might only get images of common birds, like robins who seems to pose for me as if to say they were tired of being overlooked.

And there was this little bird, that was cute, but I couldn’t tell in the low light what he or she was. I figured a sparrow and I wasn’t too excited. When I got home and began to process the photos I realized it was a phoebe with nesting material! What a cutie! But at the time I was feeling sort of sad.

I trucked on, stopping when I heard something, looking for opportunities. I talked to a birder who was walking behind me for quite awhile. He said he was out there to see deer and eagles. I assured him he’d see eagles near the back of the trail, and there had been deer earlier, by the parking lot.

Just after he left me I noticed these guys in a field to my left. I wonder if the birder noticed them at all.

I moved slowly down the path. If there’s one thing I’ve learned it’s that when I’m walking I don’t see much, but the wildlife sees me. I’ve missed lots of opportunities by moving around too much. And by changing lenses.

I almost always think I have the wrong lens, and plenty of times on this walk I wished I didn’t have my long lens on the camera, but this hike I was determined to use one lens and stop often.
In the end I think it worked out.

I noticed this little bird hopping along a big limb. Turns out, though I couldn’t tell at the time, that it’s a cute little junco. You can tell it from the phoebe by it’s pinkish bill. They should be migrating further north any time now.

As I moved closer to the back of the trail I concentrated more on the beautiful reflections in the still water.

And the angles of the light and trees as another birder passes me looking for anything interesting.

About then I heard what I thought was a woodpecker right above my head. Well darn it, I thought, so far I haven’t gotten images of much of anything…where IS this woodpecker? And then…there he was.

I thought maybe he was a hairy woodpecker, he was bigger than a downy, but it was hard to tell. Guess what? When I got home, and after looking at some other photographers’ work, people out there the same day, it turns out this is a yellow bellied sap sucker! I don’t think I’ve ever seen one before. Or if I have, I didn’t realize what it was.
So exciting. Still, while I was out there I didn’t know what I had and I was still pretty discouraged. I trudged on, out to the eagle’s nest. I figured I’d at least see an eagle or two or three…and yes, way off in the distance, in a massive nest was one eagle, mostly cleaning the nest with his or her back to me. Hardly anything to look at.

But there’s a bench out there and I was tired so I sat and watched the swans chase each other around in the water just past the eagle’s nest.

There seemed to be quite a rivalry going on. The light was still low and they were far away and I was having the hardest time getting a focus, but I tried.
And in between the swan shots I’d check the eagle. Finally I could see the adult eagle more clearly and I got the best shot I could.

Then I wandered on, past the dueling swans…

…where I met another birder coming the other way. He told me that there were lots of little birds on the next section of trail. Kinglets, thrush, swamp sparrows, towhees, just lots of little birds.

Great I thought, I’m having trouble getting BIG birds in focus, and I’ve never been very good at getting the littles. Those guys never hold still.
Plus, did I tell you that Thursday evening my husband and I, with the help of a neighbor and his tractor with a frontend loader, moved 30 yards of mulch? I was a little sore and a lot tired and I was double thinking even being out at the Refuge, much less walking the four mile loop. Especially when all I had so far was a bunch of out of focus bird shots.

Or so I thought.
So I trudged on along the water, then turned to head back south for the last mile and a half to the car. I was starving. My back was tired. My eyes hurt from straining while looking through the viewfinder.
But there was a mama goose, all curled up on her nest. How pretty. How peaceful.

And there, up ahead was a bench. And I had an apple and a bottle of water in my camera backpack. I gratefully slid the backpack off and sat down. The camera sat on the bench beside me, backpack at my feet and I munched the best ever apple and contemplated my day.

I was still glad to be out there, but I was tired. I didn’t really think I’d see any little birds. I was pretty unhappy with the cinnamon teal image, the eagle image, the combating swan images. I didn’t know I had a phoebe or a junco or anything else.
But the apple tasted really, really good.

And the blue sky and warm sun made me smile too. Would it be enough, just sitting in this beautiful place? Or would I ultimately be disappointed by my hike through a Michigan wonderland?

You, dear readers, will have to wait and see.
Because this is already way too long.

April 17, 2023 at 9:58 pm
…and I’m earworming to a certain Neil Young tune – yes, I could be happy with one…
BTW, what great pics! I always love to watch Kildears do their ground shuffes!
Thanks for sharing!
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April 19, 2023 at 8:26 am
More Killdeer images coming…
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April 17, 2023 at 10:05 pm
I’m so glad you saw the cinnamon teals!
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April 19, 2023 at 8:27 am
Me too!
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April 18, 2023 at 12:31 am
Cinnamon Teal ducks!!! And a Killdeer! 🙂 Life is so perfect. Thanks, Dawn!
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April 19, 2023 at 8:27 am
Isn’t it? I wish you lived near, you’d love this place!
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April 18, 2023 at 3:26 am
Oh, didn’t you have a marvellous day? And who cares if your photos didn’t ALL match up Most of them are great, and there’s always another day. You saw the creatures you photographed, and that’s the main thing.
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April 19, 2023 at 8:28 am
Yes, I was very glad to see these birds and animals…and there were many more that I didn’t get even a bad image of that I still saw and will remember.
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April 18, 2023 at 5:45 am
I’d consider that a winner of a day! That’s a lot of birds in one place. I’ve never heard of some of them you listed/saw. I especially loved seeing how the paths were so green next to the grasses and branches that haven’t blossomed with spring yet. I hear ya on wanting not to have to switch out lenses and being bummed when I have the wrong one on for the shot I want to get! It’s all part of the challenge and keeps us trying, right?
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April 19, 2023 at 8:28 am
Yes, I was thinking as I was walking that wildlife photography is a real challenge but one that I keep trying so I must love it. Even when I’m totally exhausted.
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April 20, 2023 at 5:45 am
I think you have a gift – it’ll give you the strength to keep on discovering the next best shot!
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April 20, 2023 at 8:56 am
Thank you.
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April 20, 2023 at 4:03 pm
You’re welcome!
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April 18, 2023 at 7:18 am
What a great variety! You could have met the Thirty-Bird Challenge in one outing!
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April 19, 2023 at 8:30 am
Good point! And you haven’t even seen part two of this adventure yet!
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April 18, 2023 at 8:35 am
The cinnamon teals are so striking! Glad you were able to get a photo of them. And I’m with Shelley. You had a winner of day. What a place of beauty that is home to so much life. Wonderful!
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April 19, 2023 at 8:30 am
Yes he was pretty epic…especially in that gold early morning light.
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April 18, 2023 at 9:31 am
You saw so much, Dawn! Your photos are always wonderful.
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April 19, 2023 at 8:30 am
Thank you Lois! It’s so much fun to try to get the image I see in my brain.
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April 18, 2023 at 1:14 pm
Looks to me like you have a good day. Up before dawn after moving all that mulch? You put me to shame for sure!
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April 19, 2023 at 8:31 am
I think my middle name is crazy.
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April 18, 2023 at 9:35 pm
Those “interesting” ones are cowbirds, aren’t they? Your photographs don’t look out of focus to me at all. Lovely! I wish I’d popped for the longer lens — but there’s always next year, right?
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April 19, 2023 at 8:32 am
I think they are. I didn’t realize there were 3 in the image until I was processing them. Oh yes…I dream of a longer long lens myself. And of course a macro. And and and…. 🙂
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April 18, 2023 at 10:17 pm
I already commented, but I have to comment again. These photos were stunning! Besides (of course!) those three types of birds … the Cinnamon Teal, and the Killdeer, and the Swallows 🙂 …. the eagle was stupendous. As much as I love birds (and those three especially), my very favorite photo was #17, the tree trunks in the water. I wanted to pull up a chair and just sit and stare. Thank you.
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April 19, 2023 at 8:33 am
I took so many reflection images that didn’t make it into this post. Perhaps in the Part 2 post there will be more. We’ll see. But I guarantee you’ll like the post regardless.
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April 22, 2023 at 6:07 am
This line… “If there’s one thing I’ve learned it’s that when I’m walking I don’t see much, but the wildlife sees me.” I love that!
What a spectacular walk you had. The eagle’s nest is so magnificent. I’ve never heard of a cinnamon teal, so I learned something new today.
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April 22, 2023 at 12:40 pm
It was a great walk. The eagle’s nest is so huge, but you don’t really see how big it is until you see an adult eagle sitting in or on it!
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