A good guess, Ann, but the Bittern has brown wings and no crown of feathers -- 
as far as I can tell. And I did follow the bird that I shot in flight. I'm sure 
he landed in the water. I was convinced at first that this was a different 
bird, but after looking at some pics of juvenile herons on the Audubon pages, I 
think this is the same bird. Could b wrong of course.


On Aug 5, 2013, at 12:19 PM, Ann Sanfedele <[email protected]> wrote:

> I think the second one is a Bittern, Paul
> ann
> 
> On 8/5/2013 10:21, Paul Stenquist wrote:
>> This somewhat immature Heron was standing in a shallow Rouge River feeder 
>> stream in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. As I approached it took flight. I 
>> followed it downstream a couple hundred feet and saw another bird that 
>> appeared to be a different species standing on a log (unfortunately, against 
>> a busy background). He had a crown of feathers standing straight up and 
>> brown markings on his neck. After studying the Audubon guide this morning, 
>> I've come to the conclusion that they're one and the same. Herons all have 
>> that crown of feathers, but this is the first time I've seen them extended.
>> 
>> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=17486421&size=lg
>> 
>> http://photo.net/photodb/photo?photo_id=17486422&size=lg
>> 
> 
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