Braving shoe-sucking mud for photos

A green heron, feet obscured by grasses, stands on a downed log in a swamp.

The Dyson Tract along the Delaware and Raritan Canal has been drawing lots of birders to check out the little blue herons that have taken up residence for the last week or so. I’d stopped by a few days ago and went back Sunday afternoon.

At this time of year, the trees are thick with leaves, making it harder to see into the swamp. There are only a couple of places affording a clear vantage point, and my first decent views came from a break in the trees along the gravel trail that runs perpendicular to the canal towpath. I spotted a great egret and what I believed were two of the little blues from there, but they were distant.

I had the foresight to bring my monopod to make for steadier shots, and it also served as walking stick. I walked back toward the towpath and spotted some trampled grass leading down to the edge of the swamp. I gave it a try, steadying myself with the monopod and keeping alert for ticks. I reached the edge of the swamp, with spongy black soil below my feet.

The view was worth the mud. I startled a green heron, which flew off one log onto another maybe 50 feet from me. That’s when I made my best shot of the day, the one topping this post.

VIew into swamp, with dead trees poking out of the water, a great egret strutting at the right and two little blue herons farther back on the left.
View from the edge of the swamp, with a great egret at right and two little blue herons farther back at left.

I stayed at the edge of the swamp for about 10 minutes, shooting a pair of egrets relatively near and a couple of the little blue herons farther away. I found my monopod sinking into the mud and decided it was time to head back to firmer ground. As I turned, my left hiking shoe stuck in the muck and nearly came off before I snugged it back on my heel.

Two little blue herons point their beaks while they explore between dead trees in the swamps. Parts of their bodies are in shadow.
Two young little blue herons poke around in the swamp. Their shadows have a blue tinge, foreshadowing their adult coloring.

I decided to take another look from my initial vantage point, and I was rewarded with narrow but good looks at a couple of little blues.

As I was training my camera on the little blues, I was startled when a great blue heron flew in from the left. I didn’t get a clear shot of the big bird landing, but I got a shot showing it standing behind one of the little blue herons. It’s a good indicator of the relative size of the two species.

A great blue heron treads in the swamp water at rear while a little blue heron stands on a fallen log in foreground.
Great blue heron at back, little blue heron in front.

Other birders have reported seeing six little blue herons at the Dyson Tract. I recorded four on e-Bird. It’s possible I got a glimpse of a fifth. I couldn’t see the sixth, which may have flown off or was roosting in a tree.

Regardless, it was a treat to see so many elegant birds in one location and to have survived the mud with both shoes and no ticks attached. 🦅

Published by Dan

University media executive by day, blogger by night, I am a well-traveled resident of New Jersey

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