BIRD IN FLIGHT ONLY -- share your BIF photos here

It is a shadow. Camera white balance pulls brightest details to be white. Those are in direct sun so contain red part of sun spectrum. White feathers in shade receive only diffuse light from sky that is predominantly blue.

Any shade on white or gray is of opposite colour balance to the light source. Just look at old school watercolour masters, J.W.M. Turner conveyed the warmth of the scene by fooling our eyes by cool blue tones in shades.
As I did say "...especially at the edge of the wing!" - and read the Alan's last post. And what part of the bird will make that "shade" (especially making that triangle white spot where the normal shade should continue)?! Blue, partially transparent ribbon (if the darker spots, also at the edge of the wing, are not wrinkles!!).
 
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Are you sure it is a shadow? The edges are very well-defined and you can see a triangular region of white at the bottom left of the blue band which you would think would also be in shadow. We have yet to hear from the poster.

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The closer shadow is to the object making it, the sharper its edges are. Leading edges of any bird wings are not that different from airplane wings: straight (locally). Triangular area is more "white" as it lacks brown feathers of scapular and upperparts. It is hard to believe what our visual system can pull out when dealing with white balance.
 
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Are you sure it is a shadow? The edges are very well-defined and you can see a triangular region of white at the bottom left of the blue band which you would think would also be in shadow. We have yet to hear from the poster.

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It seems like a shadow to me as well, the feather pattern is visible even in the darker area.
 
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Very nice shots, Rule556.
Thank you. The Galapagos are a life changing place. My head (and lens) were constantly on a swivel. Constantly changing conditions and light, every angle a different species to shoot, just incredible.

I'd post my favorite here, but as it's a penguin it's a decidedly non BIF photo. LOL
 
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What is the blue band on its right wing?
A Herring Gull with a blue wing band is a research-tagged bird. These colored bands, often with a unique code like a 3-letter combination, are used by ornithologists in research projects to study the movement, survival, and populations of gulls. Seeing such a bird provides valuable data for these studies, so reporting the sighting and any visible codes can be very helpful to the researchers.
 
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A Herring Gull with a blue wing band is a research-tagged bird. These colored bands, often with a unique code like a 3-letter combination, are used by ornithologists in research projects to study the movement, survival, and populations of gulls. Seeing such a bird provides valuable data for these studies, so reporting the sighting and any visible codes can be very helpful to the researchers.
Thanks for clearing that up.
 
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A Great Blue Heron yesterday.
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These were rather deep crops even with using a 600mm+ 1.4x TC. I wolud like to have gotten closer, but I couldn't fit a kayak in my backpack. :)
 
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