Breakfast Is Served #2
by Sandra Huston
Title
Breakfast Is Served #2
Artist
Sandra Huston
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
"Breakfast Is Served" is an original fine art wildlife photograph by Sandra Huston.
Honored to be featured in the following Fine Art America and Pixels.com groups:
* Wildlife One A Day on 7/26/18
* FAA Portraits - Birds on 7/26/18
* Animal Photographs on 7/26/18
* Whats New on 7/27/18
* Maine Fine Art Photography on 8/25/18
* Birds In Focus on 9/23/18
This image is # 11 of 12 in a series of loon photographs captured on Woodbury Pond of our latest addition to Tacoma Lakes. This common loon pair is dutifully protecting their new loon chick born just days ago. I first spotted them in front of our lake shore deck Friday late morning on July 20th after hearing the male’s tremolo call warning the boaters away from its mate and new chick. I just had to take my kayak out and document this newest addition to our pond in Litchfield, Maine. I hope you enjoy these images as much as I enjoyed capturing them.
Loon facts: Common loons are larger than the other loon species. Adults are 28 to 35 inches (70 to 90 centimeters) long with a wingspan of 60 inches (152 cm). Their weight ranges from 3.5 to 17.6 lbs. (1.6 to 8 kilograms). Common loons breed in forested lakes and large ponds found in Greenland, Iceland and northern North America. Wikipedia
The first few weeks of a loon chick’s life is very precarious, the loon parents have to be on the constant look out for eagles and osprey flying overhead also snapping turtles and large mouth bass below the water that prey on new loon chicks. That is why you will sometimes see day old chicks on their parents back or under their wings as that is the warmest and safest place to be until they are 2 weeks old. It’s amazing that it only takes few days and baby chicks can swim and dive on their own. Both loon parents will feed there chick small fish, crayfish and leeches until it can catch its own meal at about 8 weeks old. Loon chicks begin to learn how to fly when they are about 10 to 12 weeks old. They will now be almost as large as the parents but will have grayish brown plumage. Juvenile loon chicks will not develop the beautiful black and white breeding plumage until they reach 3 years old and are mature enough to breed. Once the ice begins to freeze here in the north the loons will migrate and winter along the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of North America, Iceland and Europe. The adult loons will not return to fresh water until spring when the ice has thawed and they are ready to breed once again.
The keywords associated with this photograph include: common loon, (Gavia immer) loon parent, loon chick, breakfast, fish, feeding, birds, waterfowl, avian, original, fine art photography, loon series, Woodbury Pond, Litchfield, Maine, Sandra Huston, wildlife, wild, nature, animal, green, lake, reflections, Maine Artist, wildlife decor, wall art, home decor, duvet cover, fleece blanket, beach towels, shower curtain, tote bags, coffee mugs, greeting cards, Pixels.com.
Uploaded
July 23rd, 2018
Statistics
Viewed 136 Times - Last Visitor from Cambridge, MA on 04/18/2024 at 2:52 PM
Embed
Share
Sales Sheet
Comments (10)
Don Columbus
Congratulations Sandra, your work is Featured in "Birds In Focus" I invite you to place it in the group's "2018 Featured Image Archive" Discussion!! L/Tweet
Sandra Huston
Thank you Alana Ranney, for the feature in the group: Maine Fine Art Photography, honored and greatly appreciated!
Sandra Huston
Thank you Judy Vincent, for featuring "Breakfast Is Served" in FAA's group: Whats New, honored and greatly appreciated!
Sandra Huston
Thank you Scott Wallace, for the feature in the group: FAA Portraits - Birds, honored and greatly appreciated!
Sandra Huston
Thank you Doug Norkum, for featuring "Breakfast Is Served" in the group: Animal Photographs, honored and greatly appreciated!
Morris Finkelstein
Wonderful capture of a Common Loon feeding its chick, with great timing, pose, and perspective, Sandra! F/L
Sandra Huston
Thank you Mariola Bitner, for featuring "Breakfast Is Served" in the group: Wildlife One A Day, honored and much appreciated!