Tag Archives: Cattle egret

Eldorado the Cattle Egret Comes to the Rescue, Again!

Well, hello everyone again!  Ms P called me to come and fill in for Maya the Great Egret. Again.  I was all but  settled into my lone hammock in the Everglades when I got the call.  Have to say I’m a trifle miffed because I was just getting to a breakthrough in my own dilemma and had to–ahem–abort!  Oh well!  It’s all for a good cause.  Apparently, wee Maya the Great (sic) Egret had a meltdown when she saw that Ms P had changed the “set” for her narration of the latest tale of woe and redemption.  Set.  SET.  SET.  Where does she GET these notions, I ask you!!!  Oh sorry, you probably don’t have a CLUE with regards to what I’m gnashing on about!!  Ms P is in the process of having a new “do” on the blog (adding galleries, etc.)–long overdue, if you ask me!  So, Missy  Maya couldn’t handle the new ‘set’ as she calls it and collapsed in tears.  The DRAMA!!!  Anyhaydaloo, Ms P asked me to elaborate on the upcoming post and point out that there is and will be new features on this “set”.  The pair below,  Desdemona and Othello, have been having quite a time of it, let me  tell you:

[caption id="attachment_1530" align="aligncenter" width="685" caption="Desdemona and Othello, the Great Blue Herons"][/caption]

Here’s a closer look:

and here’s poor wee Des:

Their story has it all:  love, passion, grief, loss, betrayal, jeal…what Ms P? Oh…

Oh, sorry–scratch that last bit. That’s the introduction to Maya’s narration.  Hopefully, Ms P will post a link to one of my favourite pieces of music that I absolutely love to immerse myself in..  Oh GOOD, she did.  Here it is.  Come back soon and read about Des and O.

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Eldorado the Cattle Egret Makes His Debut!

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. I’m very pleased–albeit a tad harried–to introduce myself.  I’ll be your narrator today.  I’m filling in for Maya the Great Egret who was filling in for Ms P who is…suffice it to say, I’ll do the job.

[caption id="attachment_1490" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption="Eldorado the Cattle Egret"][/caption]

You see, Ms Maya had a meltdown during rehearsals for the upcoming post on Jealously down by the Rookery or some such idiotic title to that effect.  Oh, sorry–I’m Eldorado the Cattle Egret and I’m a very distant cousin of Zinnia the Cattle Egret.  Anyway, here’s a look at the upcoming post (which will appear after the conclusion of Delila the Roseate Spoonbill’s dilemma with Basilio):

[caption id="attachment_1491" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption="Mac and Apple the Great Blue Herons"][/caption]

You really must excuse Ms P for the lame names she has come up with, lately!  (Honestly, Mac and apple–must have a private word with her anon.)  At any rate, the two have a sad tale to tell and I’m rather relieved to report that Maya the Great Egret will, indeed, be doing that narration in a few weeks.  So, I’ll bid you all adieu (I’m off to the Everglades for a long vacation to work out my own dilemma).   I’ll leave you with this music that underlies the sentiments  I feel right now.

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The Saga of Naming the Tricolor Heron Triplets (© Photos under the Sun)

Everyone has been there: finding the perfect name for the baby, the pet, the association, the house, the company, the web domain—the list goes on and around the globe several times.  Now, most have plenty of resources to consult when finding that perfect name but what happens when the parents of  ADORABLE Tricolor Heron triplets live well beyond the expected wading bird infant mortality age span (EWBIMAS™ for short)?  You have to remember that most hatchings in the wild don’t survive in their full numbers due to numerous predators and conditions.  So, what a dilemma—albeit a super, wonderful one when the proud parents of triplets came to their juvenile stage intact!!  Just imagine: 3, yes that’s three, THREE Tricolor Herons from the same hatching surviving.  Well, it almost totally defeated the predator and wading bird clans at the rookery.  But before we get into that, let’s do a rundown on what happens to the Tricolor Heron during mating season.  First, the most beeeeeeeeeeeaaaaaaauuuuuutifuuuuuuuuul color change happens along with a sprouting of jaunty feathers on the head:

matingcolors-1

Then, the eggs arrive (I swear I don’t know how :D ) and then the chickelinos arrive:

[caption id="attachment_1349" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Daddy, Am I the Mostest precious you ivver saw/""]"Daddy, Am I the Mostest precious you ivver saw/"[/caption] [caption id="attachment_1350" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Say, why doant uuu askke Mommie to git us some a that there mullet king stuff fer brunch, naw????""]"Say, why doant uuu askke Mommie to git us some a that there mullet king stuff fer brunch, naw????"[/caption]

Are they adorable or what? No need to answer!!

Then the survivors turn into MONSTERS –glorious ones—that pester the parents until they are ready to go forward into the big, wide universe.  Fortunately, for the parents, this does not take long.

[caption id="attachment_1351" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Yeah, yeah, awritte, gonna be a big shrimmpppeee loaded day, yeah, yeah, uh huh, now!""]"Yeah, yeah, awritte, gonna be a big shrimmpppeee loaded day, yeah, yeah, uh huh, now!"[/caption]

In the case of William and Mary, things went a little bit differently, much to the glee of the whole rookery.  Their triplet hatching survived WAY, way  beyond EWBIMAS™ and grew into this:

[caption id="attachment_1352" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Brack, breack, breeeeck""]"Brack, breack, breeeeck"[/caption]

But now there was a little dilemma:  what to call them and nobody but NOBODY could tell them apart. William knew that yes, there were two girls and one boy but for the life of him couldn’t tell which was who:

[caption id="attachment_1354" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption="""Breack, brack, breeeeck""]""Breack, brack, breeeeck"[/caption]

Mary drove herself crazy trying to memorize and match the individual squawks with the number of squiggly hairs sticking up from their lovable heads:

[caption id="attachment_1355" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Breeeck, brack, breack""]"Breeeck, brack, breack"[/caption]

William suggested they call them:  Melina and Serena for the girls and Purina for the lone boy. “Purina”, sputtered Mary—“You want to name him after a cat and dog food, after surviving all the predators and alligators, you WANT TO NAME HIM AFTER PEOPLE PET FOOD!!!!  NOT IN THIS NEST, YOU WON’T!!”

triplets4-1

And so it was and so it stayed that way—no names and the confusion on who was what and which was who and what was whom remained. What to do?  Oh, how they worried and all at the rookery worried and worried and worried.  Then one fine day, Spinoza the Cattle Egret was in the middle of turning her eggs in the nest and it came to her:  “We’ll set up a caucus to give them names”, she said and that was that.

[caption id="attachment_1357" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""HHHHmmmmmmmm, I think I see a crack, I think I do: woant be long now...""]"HHHHmmmmmmmm, I think I see a crack, I think I do:  woant be long now..."[/caption]

The Rookery Caucus was born.  They were:  1) PONDEROSA

[caption id="attachment_1359" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption="Ponderosa the Great Blue Heron"]Ponderosa the Great Blue Heron[/caption]

Now when Ponderosa was young, nobody thought he’d ever amount to anything because he was a little “wild on the mild side”:

[caption id="attachment_1360" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""yaaahoooo y'all here 'n 'th roooooooookrie: wanna go git soma shraimmpppe???""]"yaaahoooo y'all here 'n 'th roooooooookrie: wanna go git soma shraimmpppe???"[/caption]

But he matured into the most serious Great Blue Heron in the environs and people started to call him “Ponderosa”.  It was not because of his long, long, long neck that evoked that tall pine tree but when asked a question, Pondie (as he was fondly nicknamed) would lower the eyelid a tad and spend the next hour mulling over a possible response.

The next member of the Caucus to be elected was Uma the Great Egret:

[caption id="attachment_1361" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""I thaink I've gotte ittt! Or mebbe notte""]"I thaink I've gotte ittt!  Or mebbe notte"[/caption]

Uma, like Ponderosa, liked to be sure before making any kind of pronouncement. Uma’s friend Nezjaune (that’s French for “Yellow Nose”), the Wood Stork was number 3 elected to the caucus.  He is named “Nezjaune” because his juvenile yellow beak shone like a lighthouse beacon any time he came in contact with anyone he liked or loved.  There was no being on this earth he did not like or love–hence the name.  He liked to be democratic and invite all his croc friends into the decision:

[caption id="attachment_1362" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""So, whachalle thaink? I needdde yer input.""]"So, whachalle thaink?  I needdde yer input."[/caption] [caption id="attachment_1363" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Uma, doant ya worrie none, these here crocs are my frienddess. Yesse, uh huh!""]"Uma, doant ya worrie none, these here crocs are my frienddess. Yesse, uh huh!"[/caption]

The fourth member of the Caucus was none other than Zinnia, herself quite noted at the Rookery for her fabulous colors.  Here she is with her family:

CattleEfamily-1

So, the four came together and spent night after night kicking out names. They consulted the Rookery Book of Names for the 21st Century–yet unpublished for lack of funds–due to the Avian economy and therefore due to the Human economy.  They persevered and stayed up all night–often calling out to the Shaman up on Lake Okeechobeebee (that’s how they spell it, I swear!!)–anyway, it’s the biggest lake in Florida.  They went back through the names in the stories of their storytellers and yet could not find names that others had not already taken!!!  they even consulted the Sandhill Cranes who resided waaaaay outside of the Rookery:

[caption id="attachment_1367" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, "]"Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa,  Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa,  Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa,  Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa,  Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa,  Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa,  Hi Zinnia, Hi Nezjaune, Hi Uma, Hi Ponderosa, [/caption]

But even the AWESOME Sandhill Cranes (who have so many brains that they leave some in the bushes to lighten the load) didn’t have an answer!!  Ponderosa–by then he was elected leader– finally admitted defeat:

[caption id="attachment_1365" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""I have a heavy heart and admit defeat--Ima skeptical that we'll ivver git new names for all three""]"I have a heavy heart and admit defeat--Ima skeptical that we'll ivver git new names for all three"[/caption]

Well. the Rookery underwent the cloudiest day you would ever want to see in Southwest Florida. The clouds that hung low were not the kind that made photographers skip with joy.  No, they were full of sadness and hardness and edges and bled every color of its hapiness.  But then, a miracle happened.  Zinnia the Cattle Egret had a brainwave:

[caption id="attachment_1366" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""I've JUST had a brainwave!!""]"I've JUST had a brainwave!!"[/caption]

“We must call them after the stars or something that sounds like that:  Celeste, Twilight and NorthStar would be a start.”, she said and the Caucus 4 nodded in grateful agreement.

So, now the Triplets have names and when the parent comes to visit they are perfectly identifiable:

[caption id="attachment_1368" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""OK, Twilight, stop yer nattering""]"OK, Twilight, stop yer nattering"[/caption]

And yes, they become demanding:

[caption id="attachment_1369" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Northstar, there's not a lobster left in Southwest Florida--ya will hafta do wif shrimp.""]"Northstar, there's not a lobster left in Southwest Florida--ya will hafta do wif shrimp."[/caption]

And oh, so like the rest:

[caption id="attachment_1370" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Celeste, tell yer siblings to calm down-we're goin' ta see the sunset and thain on to "Alle ya Kin Eet Shraimp." Be grateful fer what ya gotte, now!""]"Celeste, tell yer siblings to calm down-we're goin' ta see the sunset and thain on to "Alle ya Kin Eet Shraimp."  Be grateful fer what ya gotte, now!"[/caption]

And so we come to the end of our story. I want to wish everyone a very happy life and to those in the US a very Happy  Thanksgiving.  Remember, every day you can take a breath means that you can find one more thing of beauty.  Be happy!  Here’s a link to a favorite storyteller of mine Enjoy!!  :D

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When Cattle Egrets Grow Up.

A few days ago, I posted some pictures of the life cycle of the Cattle Egret. Have you ever wondered what happens when they are all grown up?  Do they stay in the rookery?  Do they hang around with the parents and drive them crazy?  No, they take off and lead their own lives. Some will travel to previously unknown regions like the twins here:

[caption id="attachment_1204" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""D'ya wanna go to da eeverglades or stay 'round here?" "]"D'ya wanna go to da eeverglades or stay 'round here?"  [/caption]

And, like everyone else, they will follow the food: in this case, insects that are the cattle’s entourage:

CEgret1-1

They’ll do “ride ‘em cowboy” with the poor unsuspecting cow or steer:

[caption id="attachment_1206" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Giddy-up there, moomoomawmaw. (Singing) "Oh, make me a hooooooome where the buffalo roam, an'...""]"Giddy-up there, moomoomeemee.  (Singing) "Oh, make me a hooooooome where the buffalo roam, an'..."[/caption]

Others will hang out in twos:

[caption id="attachment_1207" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Lottsa dragonflies out today.""]"Lottsa dragonflies out today."[/caption]

Or in threes:

[caption id="attachment_1209" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""I'm bored, let's go ride some cattle!""]"I'm bored, let's go ride some cattle!"[/caption]

They’ll play riding on the wind:

[caption id="attachment_1210" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Whee, LOOK!  I'm flying an' I'm not even tryin'.""]"Whee, I'm flying."[/caption]

They’ll pretend they’re ski-ing backwards on the rocks:

[caption id="attachment_1211" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""Watch, watch, watch, Ima do it fer real now.""]"Watch, watch, watch, Ima do it fer real now."[/caption] [caption id="attachment_1212" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption=""BUT Ms P, THAT'S NOT A ROCK!!!!!!""]"BUT Ms P, THAT'S NOT A ROCK!!!!!!"[/caption]

Well, what is it then?  Oh, it’s a:

[caption id="attachment_1213" align="aligncenter" width="900" caption="It's a COW, for Pete's sake!"]It's a COW, for Pete's sake![/caption]

So, now you know what a Cattle Egret LOVES to do (besides eating insects, etc.).  They want to be free to roam in our beautiful Southwest Florida open pastures and  Here’s a song that expresses that sentiment.  Have a wonderful life, y’all. :D

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