Came across this poem by Julie Bruck in a recent edition of the New Yorker, which matched the photos I took just the day before:
Not one of Mr. Balanchine’s soloists had feet this articulate,
the long bones explicitly spread, then retracted,
even more finely detailed than Leonardo’s plans for his flying machines.
And all this for a stroll, a secondary function,
not the greatdramatic spread and shadow of those pterodactyl wings.
This walking seems determined less by bird volition or
calculations of the small yellow eye
than by an accident of breeze, pushing the bird on a diagonal,
the great feet executing their tendus and lifts in the slowest of increments,
hesitation made exquisitely dimensional,
as if the feet thought themselves through each minute contribution to propulsion,
these outsized apprehenders of grasses and stone, snatchers of mouse and vole,
these mindless magnificents that any time now
will trail their risen bird like useless bits of leather.
Don’t show me your soul, Balanchine used to say, I want to see your foot.
Perfect lighting for great shots….
Beautiful pictures! nice captures.
Thanks!
Beautiful action shots… great use of natural light too 🙂
Thanks! Gotta love sunset light!
Great lighting for such a regal bird. Black legs belong to the Great White Egret. This one looks muddy, so may be a juvenile. 🙂
Possibly your greatest photos yet. Love these! Poetry in motion.
Thank you! I shot these while sitting in my kayak, which is why I was able to get close.