Fort Myers Bicycle Birding: Wood Stork!

Molly and I have reached Florida, and I am enjoying time away from all the craziness the Northeast Minnesota owl irruption has caused. Instead of hiking while the temperature hovers around 3F, I am bicycling in 75F heat. It is a pleasing change. As I have noted many times before in this blog I always take my camera with me while cycling. If you only have your camera with you when out on a formal birding outing, invariably you will miss many photogenic birding opportunities. One does not need a HUGE lens. Yesterday I had my Sony A6300 and its 350 mm lens (525 mm full sized sensor equivalent) in my pannier. Obviously a full sized DSLR or Mirrorless with a huge lens would not be practical to take on a bike ride.

I was super excited when I spotted this pair of wood storks in the late afternoon light. While not rare, these birds seen harder to find down here in photogenic spots.

Wood Storks by Bike


Coming soon … Monk Parakeets building a nest in a palm tree! This nest building was by far more exciting to me this morning than watching local Burrowing Owls which were only 100 yards distant. Remember, I am escaping the owl madness at home!

Southbound Birding

Stay tuned to learn if “boy birder” can find his feathered friends on his way south from near the Canadian border in northern Minnesota to the southern reaches of our beautiful country, Florida. He will escape the owl invasion of 2025, and hopefully discover new plumage power. This trip across our country from north to south will take 4 days, with a first stop in Green Bay Packer Country as he attempts to learn how three of his grandchildren ever came to be Cheeseheads.

Fact Check:

  • Bird Boy is almost 69 years old, but he still often acts like a little kid
  • The Owl Irruption will continue till at least March 1st. As crazy as this may seem, watching a Great Gray Owl is almost becoming boring. The key word here is “almost”.
  • This epic journey will be repeated later this month, Northbound Birding.
  • The journey begins now in the pre-dawn darkness of northern Minnesota. Les and Amy are hooting their love as I put the final items in our car.

10 Owls Can’t be Wrong!

This winter birding season is crazy … crazy good in many respects. Yesterday a friend came north from the Twin Cities to hopefully see some Great Gray Owls. Anyhow, “old gray” came through and in only 3 hours of birding we saw ten owls … four by ourselves without another human present.

Another crazy aspect about this winter’s birding is twice in the past week I have gone out looking for Pine Grosbeaks. These beautiful birds this winter are a much harder find than owls. In fact I have only seen two Pine Grosbeaks all winter. I have lost track of how many Great Gray Owls I have watched.

Some pics from yesterdays’ owling … I only photographed 8 of the 10. I let my friend photograph the other two owls. Don’t miss the hunt images or the Ruffed Grouse at the end of the post.

Great Gray Owl #1

Great Gray Owl #2

Great Gray Owl #3

Great Gray Owl #4 (Signs of an Irruption)

Great Gray Owl #5

Great Gray Owl #6

Great Gray Owl #7

Great Gray Owl #8 (The Hunt … Unsuccessful)


Closely inspect these next two images. The owl is essentially hovering in place, but losing altitude as it adjusts its attack using sound triangulation. A Great Gray’s ears are offset and its brain essentially uses trigonometry to collect the sound and determine attack vectors.


Two Ruffed Grouse

Grouse #1

Grouse #2