Eagle and Heron Action Shots

If I just wanted pretty pictures of Great Blue Herons and Bald Eagles, I would save myself a long trip and sleep in because there are lots of herons and eagles nearby. Besides the sheer number of birds, the greatest appeal of Big Beef Creek is the interaction between the birds, mainly between the herons and the eagles, something I’ve never found anywhere else.

Herons know the best places to fish and tend to congregate in those spots, all the while keeping the proper distance from each other. When an eagle harasses them, the herons will either move on or fly off while dropping their catch so that the eagle will stop its harassment. It gets much more interesting, though, when a heron decides to stand up for itself, which happens more often than you might think.

Though it lacks the Eagle’s powerful talons, the Great Blue Heron is a large bird with a powerful beak that eats almost anything it can get down its throat. It’s used to being at the top of the food chain and won’t easily give up its catch, though few will continue to stand their ground if an eagle is persistent.

Although I’ve never seen a Bald Eagle actually hit a Great Blue Heron with its talons, they use them to intimidate the herons, to get them to drop their catch. More often than not this drama takes place a long ways from the road/shore and it’s hard to capture it, but that hasn’t stop me from trying.

It’s hard to predict exactly how a particular heron will react to an eagle. Some, like the one on the left, will get its feathers up and try to intimidate the eagle. Others, like the one on the right, will immediately try to fly away, while others, like the one in the middle, seem relatively indifferent to the birds swooping by them.

Bald Eagle and Great Blue Heron

Other times all the herons in a particular fishing spot will stand up to the eagle, though this seems to happen more often if it is an immature eagle.

Bald Eagle and Great Blue Herons

Even with a powerful lens it’s difficult to capture these scenes. You have to have a wide enough angle to fit all the action in, and it’s hard to get the camera focused on the moving birds, not the background.

When you’re closer, more often than not you sacrifice the overall scene for a closeup of the battles.

Bald

Occasionally you get lucky, though, and are able to capture these confrontations up close like I did here. In this case, the immature eagle hovered, mid-air over the heron, which had just chased away several other heron, and was refusing to be intimidated, though in the end it did fly away until the eagle left.

Bald Eagle and Great Blue Heron

Of course, being “lucky” usually means spending long hours waiting for the right moment. The casual visitor would probably never see an incident like this, much less be ready to capture it with his camera. After another fifty hours or so on scene I might be lucky enough to capture another shot like this.

And Great Blue Herons, Too

There’s no denying everyone goes to Big Beef Creek to photograph the eagles, but I’m not the only one who also loves seeing the Great Blue Herons. Ultimately, of course it’s the Sculpin run that brings all the birds, but the eagles, gulls, and crows all gather where the Herons are fishing. If you don’t see herons, you won’t see the others.

It’s not much of a challenge getting a picture of a Great Blue Heron fishing, though I continue to take multiple shots, but it is always challenge to get shots of them flying. It’s critical that you pan as you are shooting, particularly when they’re close, if you want a good shot. The “streaks” in the water are the result of panning as the heron flew by.

Great Blue Heron

It’s only when they’re flying that you realize just how long those wings are.

Dominic’s recent comment that birds remind him of dinosaurs, made me think that this gliding must have been awfully similar to how a pterodactyl glided.

Great Blue Heron

I’m also fascinated with Heron’s landing.

Great Blue Heron

I like this shot for an entirely different reason, though:

Great Blue Heron

its symmetry.

Skunked at Big Beef Creek

After having so much fun shooting photos of Great Blue Herons and Eagles at Big Beef Creek last year, I wasn’t about to miss the event this year. So when I heard rumors that the birds were beginning to show up I headed out to Seabeck on May 20th and again on May 22nd. The weather was beautiful both times and I had enough time to shoot this shot where the creek forms a lake before entering the Sound.

Big Beef Creek

I’m not sure I ever realized how beautiful it was the first time I was there.

Unfortunately, in the 6 hours I was there, I only saw two Great Blue herons fly by and only managed to get a few shots, like this one that flew by below me,

Great Blue Heron flying

and this one that landed up in the trees, which still strikes me as remarkable for a bird with such long legs and wings.

Great Blue Heron landing n tree

Later a pair of eagles landed in some nearby branches and appeared to be “singing” to each other, or, at least, vocalizing.

Eagles vocalizing

After a few minutes, they stopped vocalizing and posed for this shot before one of them took off.

Pair of Eagles

Still not sure what that was all about, but I was mesmerized for the length of their performance.

This pair of gulls also seemed to be a pair, but thank goodness they seemed content with some rather odd head nodding,

Pair of Gulls

because their voices are too raucous for my taste

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When nothing else showed up at Big Beef Creek after two or three hours, I drove up to Seabeck to see if there were any eagles there. There weren’t.

So I consoled myself with this shot of a male and female Purple Martin, a bird I seldom see and have never managed to get a shot of together before.

Pair of Purple Martins

I think that if these had been fishing outings we would have said that we got “skunked.” As a kid, when we didn’t catch any salmon we’d go catch some bottom fish just for the thrill of landing something. It’s hard to complain about getting to bask in sunshine for three hours both times, but I could have caught the same rays in my backyard and avoided getting up at 5:30 and driving an hour up the road.