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Monday, July 22, 2024

Not often visible

  

It was very foggy this morning, so perhaps the conditions led to this road-killed bird that I encountered today (22 July 2024).  The reddish coloration caught my eye from a distance, and I realized it was a species you don't often get to see up close, so I thought I'd share a few photos.

Note the gray face, and the reddish slightly down-turned bill.

Here's the entire bird:

 
You can see the large feet and very short tail.  This is a Virginia Rail (Rallus limicola), a secretive marsh bird, more often heard than seen.

Virginia Rails have striking barred black-and-white flanks:

 
So although this was an opportunity to learn about a local species that's not often visible but living close by in marshes and wetlands, this sighting serves as another reminder for drivers to slow down.

2 comments:

John W. Wall said...

Poor thing. Such a beautiful bird. I was picturing it more the size of a sora until the inclusion of your hand showed how small it actually was!

Lotsoflux said...

Thank you, Jackie, for this careful presentation of a bird one does not generally observe often, and certainly not up close, like this, as you mention.