Birds of Belize - Culinary Adventures
Birds gotta eat, and they exhibit all kinds of interesting behaviors when hunting for the food they like, whether insects, fish, or the juice of flowers.
Always fun watching woodpeckers poke and hammer to find their morsels. Here a Pale-billed woodpecker, top left, a Golden-olive top right, and a Chestnut-colored woody, lower right.
Woodpeckers aren't the only birds to probe for insects; below, a White-necked puffbird has a feast of termites in this huge mound high in a ceiba tree.
The Gartered trogon, right, is also eating termites, but only incidentally, as it's main task here is to carve out a nice comfortable nest in this mound for its expected brood.Speaking of young, we watched this adolescent Osprey, below, cry to be fed, looking this way and that for its parent. Maybe the successful fisher below right?
We saw many other water birds feeding in and around Caye Caulker, including (top to bottom) a Tricolored heron, Black-necked stilt, Roseate spoonbill, and Semipalmated sandpiper.
Not sure what nest this Great blue heron raided!
| Maybe a Tennessee warbler (!) sucking nectar |
| Yellow-winged tanager with berry |
At the Lamanai Mayan archeological site, we observed several Rufous-tailed jacamars hunting insects both in the air (male, left) and on the ground (female, below). Check out this video of the male calling its mate while scanning for flying bugs.
Great bird pictures, but when you said culinary, it was a bit of a tease with people food. More people pictures!
ReplyDeleteYou mean you expected to see pics of us eating the birds?!? Ha ha! Aaron
DeleteYour bird pics have always amazed me as I know how difficult they are to capture. Thanks for sharing them
ReplyDeleteThe secret, of course, is take A LOT of pictures! Aaron
DeleteStill love those photos.
ReplyDeleteHelene here: Love the photos and narratives!
ReplyDelete