Post 2 of 4
At the Schoodic Section of Acadia National Park a herring gull is wondering if I have anything for him. Feeding the wildlife is against the rules but gulls still manage to steal things from people who have brought their lunch.
A convoy of Canadian Geese off shore at Fraiser Point, part of Schoodic and the bay for the town of Winter Harbor.
At Mud Creek again. A Great Blue Heron looking for food at low tide.
Mud Creek still. Bad lighting. I think that this may be a lesser yellowlegs.
I only snatched a brief sighting of these chicks at Mud Creek. I think a family of mallard duck chicks. They went down behind the mud and did not come out again while I was there. There were other adult mallards around.
This is a curiosity. We went for a hike up Acadia Mountain on the Mount Desert Island section of the National park. Along a section of the trail each small opening had one of these flies just hovering in the middle. I'd guess that along about a 100 meter stretch of the trail every 10 meters or so there would be one of these flies just hovering. They were all facing the same direction. Butt end to me. I'm guessing that as the breeze blew towards them they were waiting for smaller insects to come along and to lunch on. Easily horse fly size.
A chipmunk along the trail up Acadia Mountain.
Back at the Schoodic section of Acadia National Park looking northeast toward the Petit Manan lighthouse that is about 9 miles away, as I snapped this shot of the lighthouse a juvenile Bald Eagle came by.
The juvenile Bald Eagle continued to fly south and as it approached Schoodic Island, off limits to people as a bird sanctuary, gull came up to harass it.
Still at Schoodic, a Cormorant flaps water out off its wings.