Predictably I got up in the middle of the night, my mistake
for sleeping on the flight over. I was able to pick up my hire car early, and
under an hour country music later I was pulling into the car park at Royal
Palm, home of the famous Anhinga Trail. I was the only person there, a fact
noticed quite quickly by the resident swarms of mosquitos. Did I have any
repellent? No. Unwise, and a lesson for anyone thinking of doing the same
thing, which presumably after my last post must be loads of you. Happily the
many bites I got during the dawn period were not ones that festered, and by
that evening they had all gone down. I suppose I might now have but Zika, but
hey.
I wandered down to the pond on the other side of the visitor
centre - lots of very large splashes but I couldn’t see anything. Fish?
Something bigger….? An Anhinga croaked out of a palm tree in annoyance before
the bugs forced me back to the car for a snooze. I woke up as another car
pulled in next to me, a fellow nature-photographer by the looks of things. That’s
what I was today too, so as it was nearly light I got my stuff together and
saddled up. The Trail is hardly a trail at all, a short board walk that crosses
a natural watercourse through the sawgrass, a slough (pronounced ‘slew’ rather
than like an inspiring town in Berkshire). Birds everywhere though not quite as
many as I had hoped – late in the season, a month earlier is probably better.
The tactic, such as there was one, was simply to walk round
in circles until you came across a bird in photographable range. There were no
shortages of these really, but there was a distinct lack of pleasing
backgrounds and I didn’t take many photos. I am never at my best on the first
day of any trip is another reason I suppose, but for all I’d read about this
place it wasn’t what I had hoped. This did not bother the vast majority of
lens-toting people who later turned up and who were all too happy to aim their
cameras at 45 degree angles down onto birds in the water or on the banks of
course, but that is normal everywhere, and especially somewhere as accessible
as the Anhinga Trail. Now that I know the lay of the land as it were, it’s
somewhere I will try and factor into a future trip, as I think it could be
worth a few mornings and evenings. As it was I reverted to birding, always an
excellent fallback option, and I am glad that I did. As soon as I stopped
concentrating on trying to get angles and views a Swallow-tailed Kite flew
over, a bird I had been crossing my fingers I might see. Utterly superb, it
just glided past and I swear I was the only person that noticed. I racked up
quite a nice little list over the course of a few hours – as well as all the
obvious herons and egrets, I pulled out Common Yellowthroat, Pine Warbler,
Yellow-rumped Warbler, Black-and-white Warbler, a silent Empid I need to try and identify from photos, White-eyed Vireo, Red-winged Blackbird, Grey
Catbird and Red-shouldered Hawk.
And then there were the stars of the show, the Alligators! By mid-morning they were hauled up everywhere, and there were some monsters! Early morning there had been the odd ripple, a few snouts detectable in quiet corners, but as it warmed up they sought out the muddy banks close to the path and flopped out. Wood Storks and Ibises drifted over, flights of Great White Egrets and Black Vultures everywhere. Excellent views of large fish as well, the Everglades simply teems with life. Most enjoyable, but eventually the crowds became too much and I sought quieter areas. The other target was Snail Kite, and they were not present in the southern glades so I drove back north to Big Cypress, an enormous area of inpenetrable swamp level with Miami where I had to be anyway. To cut a long story I didn’t see one, but I did see another two Swallow-tailed Kites as I drove around Loop Road, a partially paved route that cuts through various swampy habitat and joins back with US41 about twenty miles further west from where you join it.
Thank you for sharing this very nice written post!!! I just loved all those professional images:)
ReplyDeleteKim
hardly, but thanks!
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