Bald Eagle, Alaska

This is a photo of a bald eagle in Alaska.

A bald eagle lands on the Kenai Coast.

Here’s a photo from 2007 that I just reworked a bit.  I have to again thank my old friend Bob Gay for telling me to go to Homer, Alaska, that March.  It was so good that I went back the next two years.

Bald Eagle; Homer, Alaska

This is a photo of a mature bald eagle perched on a limb in Alaska.

Bald Eagle; Homer, Alaska.

Here’s an image I just reworked a little.  I took it in 2007, a little after getting back into photography after a 30 year hiatus.  I had just retired and my friend, Bob Gay, told me I needed to get on a plane right away and meet him in Homer, Alaska.  One of the best pieces of photography advice I’ve ever gotten.  Thanks again, Bob.

Female Kestrel, Point Reyes National Seashore

This is a photo of a female kestrel as she spreads wings prior to takeoff.

Ready for takeoff.

I went out to Point Reyes Seashore yesterday.  There wasn’t much to see, except for hundreds of people enjoying the day off.  I’m seeing very few elk at Tomales Point since the Park Service let 224 of them die of starvation in 2020 and 2021 while locked up behind that elk-proof fence.   That’s half the herd.

This female kestrel made the day a little brighter.

Male Bobcat, Point Reyes National Seashore

This is a photo of a male bobcat at Point Reyes National Seashore.

Me?  Gopher Tartare, of course.

I was out at Point Reyes yesterday.  Saw three bobcats. This is the only one I got some decent shots of.  Saw a couple of coyotes as well and they also were not in a cooperative mood.   Some smaller, less competitive bull elephant seals are again hanging out at Drakes Beach as they started doing a few years back.  Didn’t see many fenced-in elk at Tomales Point which is consistent with NPS’s policy of letting them die during drought years rather than providing them with food.   244 elk died at Tomales Point in the past two years under NPS’s “let nature take its course” policy animal enclosure policy.  Thank God the rest of the zoos in the world give food and water to the animals they have locked up.