Morning Trio. © Copyright 2019 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.
Three sandhill cranes raise their beaks to the morning sun.
Sandhill Cranes are, I think, becoming my new “favorite California bird.” I’ve gone through phases. Many, many years ago I read Aldo Leopold’s “A Sand County Almanac,” and his description of these birds — which I had never seen — made an impression. I had no idea that they were found here in California, so I didn’t think much more about them for years. There was a period when egrets (“great” and “snowy”) were the birds I most admired, then at times I focused on a few Sierra birds, including Muir’s ouzels. Not that long ago I “discovered” another bird that had been here all along when I started photographing winter migratory geese in California. That experience led me back to sandhill cranes. One of the most magical bird-related experiences I can recall was on one of those goose photography trips. At the end of the day as night fell and photography was coming to a conclusion we heard their sound coming from the southeast as twilight fell… and then huge flocks of them appeared overhead, turned and descended into the wetlands.
The experience of photographing these three birds was perhaps not so miraculous as that earlier event. I had gone to the Central Valley for something else, but since I realized I could arrive early enough to photograph birds at dawn I brought along my photography equipment. After doing some first-light photography at a spot where finding the birds was, well, a no-brainer… I decided to explore a bit and see if I could find them in more isolated locations. I found a small group of sandhill cranes in a muddy field that was partially shielded from a nearby roadway by tall brush. I stopped, stood behind my car to avoid scaring the birds, put on a long lens, and watched. They were engaged in a number of ritual behaviors, including the well-known “dancing” activity associated in most cases with mating. I’m unfamiliar with the striking behavior in this photograph or its meaning, a ritual in which groups of birds lean their heads back and in unison open their beaks.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books and Amazon.
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