This one is in full (or nearly so) breeding plumage. Now I'm almost sure you are on the West coast?
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This one is in full (or nearly so) breeding plumage. Now I'm almost sure you are on the West coast?
These are all Southern California beaches. We’ll be heading back over in a few more weeks to see what I can find.This one is in full (or nearly so) breeding plumage. Now I'm almost sure you are on the West coast?
Wimbrel. But wimbrel and curlews are in the same genus: no difference at the non-specific levelI appreciate the input of all in naming these birds. I think this is a Curlew but it could be a Wimbrel. Bokeh near the beak looked a bit strange to me. I think it is just an unfortunate effect of some debris in the "wrong spot" so I masked out behind the dune and added some more blur, (R5 with 100-500 @ 500, f/7.1; iso 125, 1/1000)
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Thanks for the answer! I took some risk judging the bird (by few photos) on subspecies levelThese are all Southern California beaches. We’ll be heading back over in a few more weeks to see what I can find.
There is a free app Seek from iNaturalist.Anyone have a favorite reference for bird identification? I've tried a few. I think this is a Black Turnstone. Again, was on a Southern California Beach. Little guy was really fast and this was with the 24-105 lens. Hope I get to see him again with a different lens
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Are you telling me the following flower is not a lilac? FYI This is Genus Syringa based on throwing a few images into bing's name that plant website -> https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/syringa-vulgaris/ Also when I purchased this plant it was tagged as a variety of Lilac. I can't recall the specific variety.Beautiful photos! Not on lilac but it could be a local, common name.


Yes I agree that is a Black Turnstone. My personal favorite field guide is the National Wildlife Federation Field guide to birds of North America . I always double check with https://www.allaboutbirds.org/news/. This site offers so much information on any area . I love the ebird alert that you can sign up for. Nice shot and hope you find them again.Anyone have a favorite reference for bird identification? I've tried a few. I think this is a Black Turnstone. Again, was on a Southern California Beach. Little guy was really fast and this was with the 24-105 lens. Hope I get to see him again with a different lens
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Looks like common lilac to me.Are you telling me the following flower is not a lilac? FYI This is Genus Syringa based on throwing a few images into bing's name that plant website -> https://plants.ces.ncsu.edu/plants/syringa-vulgaris/ Also when I purchased this plant it was tagged as a variety of Lilac. I can't recall the specific variety. View attachment 199896View attachment 199897
It's the Black Turnstone in breeding or nearly so plumage.Anyone have a favorite reference for bird identification? I've tried a few. I think this is a Black Turnstone. Again, was on a Southern California Beach. Little guy was really fast and this was with the 24-105 lens. Hope I get to see him again with a different lens
View attachment 199895