Dick and I first saw these bi-colored crows in St. Petersburg, Russia, while traveling on buses to various points of interest and guided tours in that beautiful city. Photos from a moving bus were of even less help than the first photo below, taken from a moving ship during our August holiday with
Viking River Cruises. We could see the crows, but they weren't very clear. We knew they were crows, however, so I looked them up on my little laptop computer, thanks to the availability of wi-fi almost everywhere on the ship. They were called Hooded Crows. So we knew what they were. Now for the challenge of getting a decent photo. This first one, taken from the
Viking Surkov, wasn't very successful.
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After our tours of the beautiful old wooden buildings, the 20-domed wooden cathedral, the church, and the farm buildings of the historic town of Kizhi, I was able to get fairly close to a group of hooded crows as I made my way back to the ship. Several photos later, I managed to get these two to stand still long enough for a photo with Dick's Sony camera. Hooded crows are said to be grey and black, but these ones look more like beige and black to me.
Posted for Misty Dawn's very fun meme
Camera Critters!
Thanks, Misty.
To see other critters captured by other cameras around the world, please click HERE! |
18 comments:
nice shot!
Good captures of these crows.
So glad you finally got a closeup.
These two remind me of two old guys on a corner having a conversation. :)
When I read 'hooded' I assumed the head color would be different.
On my computer they do look beige. I think it looks like they are wearing vests. :)
Nice shots!
Interesting crows! Sounds like a nice cruise!
I agree, they do look beige...but so does the concrete in the background, so maybe it was a beige day!
These two do like a couple of old guys on the corner kvetching.
The light can play tricks on our eyes and especially in photos. I often look at pictures I've taken and the colors are completely off.
Crows are not always all black - these are very beautiful!
Those are really interesting crows! Very cool!
I'm a Sony user too... which Sony does he have?
Could these hooded crows be spies, or blue jays in disguise?
I wonder what they are talking about.
@ Misty — I didn't think anyone would ask. It seems to be a DSC H50. I used it instead of my little camera because it has a 15X zoom, and those crows weren't letting me get anywhere near them.
— K
wow! they're really unique birds!
Ah, so they are far north as Russia! I first saw hooded crows in Bucharest. That's a nice colour contrast, Kay, the birds and the blue railing. :-)
Good captures! We have hooded crows in Scotland too! (Though only in the north and west, I was surprised when I first found out how common they are in continental Europe
Interesting Kay, those Hooded Crows do look beige and white as you say. Maybe as a species they vary according to geographic location but when i have seen them they are definitely grey and white. Some Egyptian and Cyprus ones on my blog both look grey and white.
I don't think I'd ever seen any!
I'm so used to our fat black crows. Are times tough in Russia, or just a characteristic of their kind? - Margy
Very cool sighting to see these crows. They are different and more interesting looking than the ones I see here.
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