@Swede1952@universeodon.com avatar Swede1952 , to random

Whisper of a Tern

I’ve said before that a photograph doesn’t need to be perfect to be worth enjoying. This soft image of a royal tern (Thalasseus maximus) is a good example. The bird is turning toward me mid‑flight, almost as if it knows I’m trying to catch the moment.

I took the shot while drifting down the Savannah River on a riverboat, with several terns following along behind us. There was something gentle about the way this one broke formation and angled toward me, wings open, light softening everything around it. Imperfect, yes—but full of life.

Step into a world where even the smallest moments—like the glint in a bird's eye—tell their own story.

https://swede1952-photographs.pixels.com

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@Akulatraxas@meow.social avatar Akulatraxas , to random

Little Tern Flyby
This is quite a small tern with just 25cm body and 41cm wingspan. They are very fast and agile and because of that a lot trickier to get a good picture of then i first anticipated :D

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@johnbloor@beige.party avatar johnbloor , to random

I've been working on the British coastal bird illustrations again. This is what they are looking like:

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@johnbloor@beige.party avatar johnbloor , to random

This is how they are all looking.

At the moment it looks a bit like there are three sets of two pairs; I need to alter colours a bit to make them more individual.

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@johnbloor@beige.party avatar johnbloor , to random

This is what the four worked-on illustrations are looking like.

Two more to go.

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@strflr@pixelfed.art avatar strflr , to random

Arctic Tern

~2022

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catdad ,
@catdad@ohai.social avatar

@strflr effin' birds has conditioned me to expect sweary messages to accompany pics like this.

To be clear, it's a lovely picture!

@Swede1952@universeodon.com avatar Swede1952 , to random

Sky Has No Edges

While touring the Savannah River near Savannah, Georgia, I noticed a few royal terns (Thalasseus maximus) trailing and circling the boat. They seemed to follow with purpose—perhaps drawn by the occasional snack tossed from passengers, or by the boat’s wake stirring up small fish and aquatic invertebrates. Either way, they moved with practiced grace, scanning the water below like airborne opportunists.

Step into a world where even the smallest moments—like the glint in a bird's eye—tell their own story.

https://swede1952-photographs.pixels.com

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@zaktakespictures@social.goodanser.com avatar zaktakespictures , to random

Royal Tern (Thalasseus maximus)

Olympus E-M1 II, Panasonic 100-300 II

300mm, f/5.6, 1/1250s, ISO 400

https://zaktakespictures.com/royal-tern/

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