Earlier today I posted a photo of a colorful cardinal to counteract the gloominess of the day. Here is an alternative if you prefer instead to relish the grayness of the day—an image of a Black Vulture (Coragyps atratus ) roosting in a dead tree.
It was a damp, cold day today as I was walking through the marshland. I happened to look up and saw a couple of large birds perched in a dead tree. At first I thought they might be wild turkeys, but when I looked at them more carefully I realized that they were Black Vultures. Previously I had seen them soaring through the air and thought they were quite beautiful, with magnificent wingspans. When you see them up close, however, “beautiful” is not an adjective that springs to mind. To be generous, you might say that they look “distinctive” or “interesting.”
Why were they hanging around? I had no idea until I talked with some folks at the information desk in the visitor center. Apparently there is a dead deer in a nearby area and the vultures have been feeding on its carcass. I guess the vultures were resting in the trees in between meals.
I processed each of these images a little differently, trying to compensate for the fact that there was not that much light, which forced me to deliberately underexpose the photos. I think I like the first one best, the one that I desaturated almost to the point of making it black and white, although I like some aspects of the other two images as well.
© Michael Q. Powell. All rights reserved.
Great shots. It’s odd here in southern Illinois that both the turkey and black vultures spend the winter about 40 miles south of here and not here. We might see one rarely.
Hey Michael, Great find and you produced a good image
Thanks. It was certainly an unexpected surprise and I am happy that I was able to produce a reasonably decent image of the vulture. He’s definitely a cool bird, in a creepy kind of way.
Very nice!
Several years ago, I saw 8 turkey vultures in a line….sitting on my roof in the morning sun (obviously having some sort of “morning meeting.”
My first panicked reaction was to quickly find a way to get them off of my roof, before I had to pay for major repairs. So…I have no photo of that!
Wow. You may not have a photo to show, but that’s certainly am unusual story to be able to tell.