Pelicans

It’s been a long, long time since I’ve shared photographs of the wonderful birds whose bills can hold more than their bellies can (with credit to Dixon Lanier Meritt, 1910). The different lighting in these shots is hard to believe even though I took them myself!

Australian Pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus)
1/1250, f/5.0, ISO 1600
Canon R5, Canon RF f/4.0 600mm L IS USM

The shot above was taken in the pre-dawn light at Murray Bridge in South Australia. It was windy and a storm was coming in from the west, close enough that Ms 16 and I had to run back to the cabin to avoid being totally soaked. The water looked amazing, like spun gold, while the pelican was bobbing up and down clearly totally unfazed.

Australian Pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus)
1/2000, f/7.1, ISO 1600
Canon R5, Canon RF f/4.0 600mm L IS USM

I love, absolutely love, the serenity and colours in the photograph above. Even the way the water bubbles around the pelican, fore and aft, showing its movement through the water. This is a bird I watched on my recent trip to Peterborough on Victoria’s Great Ocean Road. I spent a lot of time with it, getting gradually wetter as I sank into the wet sand on the banks of the coastal reserve.

Australian Pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus)
1/2000, f/8.0, ISO 640
Canon R5, Canon RF f/4.0 600mm L IS USM

I spent a long time with this character too as it ‘sailed’ back and forth in front of me as the shadows fell on the distant water. I like its spiky little crewcut and I’m always intrigued by the way their gular pouches look as though they’ve been knitted. The texture of their bills is pretty remarkable too. And those feathers, so delicate on such a large bird.

It’s taken me several hours to put this simple post together, I had no idea that midnight had crept up so quickly. I had dozens of pelican photographs to sort through and process but wanted to chose individual shots that would showcase a different aspect of this iconic bird. The species suits such a wide range of adjectives depending on the circumstances, everything from elegant to clumsy, from magnificent to comical. I hope you enjoy the details of this week’s post.

Happy birding, Kim

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