Pelicans on the dock |
Great egret waiting for a handout |
TripPix.
We have pelicans, herons and egrets in Minnesota, but they're not nearly as common as they are here in Florida, and of course they're very seasonal residents of the north country. I can't get enough of them here!
TripPix.
The other day, we met a young man in Gulfport who told us he loves all the birds on the Gulf Coast. As a fisherman, he regularly pulls in one of the shore birds on his line, and often spends many hours pulling hooks caught in the birds' backs and untangling fishing line, his own and older line that sometimes wraps itself around their neck or legs. I have a new admiration for people who do this -- and I've seen disentangling work quite often. A few years ago, my sister Marilyn helped a fisherman performing such a task.
This afternoon I watched a couple of commercial fishermen fillet fish at one of the docks in Blind Pass. The guys threw skin, tails and guts to the pelicans swimming close together in the area below the dock, each greedily jumping at the treats and even attempting to grab food out of one another's long beaks.
A snowy egret sat quietly to the right of one of the fishermen, waiting for special handouts, regularly thrown to him. He was clearly a favorite, and it seemed that the egret actually got fillets, not just scraps. One was so large that the bird had trouble swallowing the big chunk of fish.
These beautiful birds seem so vulnerable to environmental messes created by humans, but today I felt hopeful and certain that much is right with the world.
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