Friday, September 5, 2008

Down the Pathways of the Sky


Down the 'pathways of the sky' from Alaska to Inskip Point. A newly arrived flock of Bar-tailed Godwits rest on a sandbank at high tide.

On the other end of the sand bank there were also small numbers of Eastern Curlews, Grey-tailed Tattlers and Great Knots with the Godwits.Visit SWF today

25 comments:

  1. Alaska is a beautiful place and you captured it well.

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  2. wonderful blue sky

    I hope have time to stop at my SWF post : in here and here Thanks

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  3. Oops! Sorry Bradley - this is Australia the birds have just arrived from Alaska.

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  4. Amazing! I just love how you captured those birds! Mine is HERE.Thanks! Happy SWF!

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  5. Sea, sand and a beautiful sky with lots of birds make a lovely picture! Happy Sky Watch Friday!

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  6. it is worth it that you have posted a marvelous photo. as it is really lovely to see it with the sky…

    check out mine here:HERE

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  7. great photos and that is a lot of birds

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  8. Mikk: What a great flock of birds for your SWF.

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  9. You get some great visitors up there Mick. Nice to see them. We'll get a few down here too, later. When I look at them I'm always amazed at how they got this far.
    Gouldiae

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  10. Birds and a big sky always make a glorious landscape! Lovely pics!

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  11. beautiful shot:) Alaska or Australia - it is the same sky and it just is wonderful:)

    Petunia's SWF post

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  12. Thanks to all the above for your comments. I'll visit as many of you as I can later on today.

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  13. Hi Mick
    I am impressed that you predicted the arrival of the migrants, and then they turned up.
    Cheers
    Denis

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  14. I am so glad that i enlarged the photos to see these great birds as i have never seen or heard of them. Amazing

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  15. Thanks again to all for visiting and commenting. Hi Dennis. It's not my skill but rather careful records kept over a number of years by other shorebird enthusiasts and then cumulative records shared.

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  16. Inspired by this and your previous post on migrant waders, I trotted off down to a suitable habitat ... and saw nuttin'. (Well, apart from the usual suspect.) So I'll watch them through your posts. I get a better view that way!

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  17. Oh dear! Sorry for the lack of waders down your way Snail. I am not even sure when they turn up down there and it is certainly early days up here. Although there was a sizable flock of godwits that I photographed in the last post - in excess of 500 birds by actual count.

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  18. Good stuff! I haven't found any big wader roosts in my area yet. There must be some somewhere, That's one thing Scotland had no shortage of.

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  19. Gosh Mick - we got really excited at seeing four Bar-tailed Godwits at a Wetland Reserve near us recently. Let alone a whole flock - WOW

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  20. I am always amazed at the distance these birds fly. We have the Canadian geese coming through Salem (Oregon) each year. I love taking their photos, especially time when they have their little babies. Nice photos, thanks for the posting.

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  21. Hi Mosura, it will be interesting to hear what waders you find down your way later in the season.
    Hi Tricia, I had to get my book out to see where the range of Bar-tailed Godwits was. I hadn't even realized you saw them in Britain. The books say it is a different sub-species - lapponica - and we see baueri. So thank you I have learned something new.
    Hi Columbo, nice to have you comment. Do you see Marbled Godwit where you live or close by? I was lucky enough to see them during the fall migration out on the coast of Washington State a few years ago when I was visiting there.

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  22. this is a lovely shot - well captured.

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