Last month, my friend, Jon, and I made a trip to Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in search of waterfowl. American Coots were very common, but most of them were too far for photographs. Neither of us had good photos of this bird in our archives so we were determined to change that. We had a couple of Coots tease us up close, while grasses were in-between us and them; others were close, but back-lit.
As we were leaving the refuge, Jon pulled the car over to put his camera away. He pulled up at the opening of a small pond. I looked out my window and saw a Coot right below me.
A Coot up close? CHECK! The sun was behind us? CHECK! We carefully got out of the car and Jon made his way to the passenger side. We snapped away at the bird for ten minutes while it foraged through the vegetation before leaving it.
Fun fact about Coots: When you see that black bird with a big white bill bobbing in the water, do not confuse it for a duck. Coots are more closely related to rails and cranes than they are to ducks! Just because it look looks like a duck (almost…) and acts like a duck, doesn’t mean it’s a duck!