![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjiGb8ogcTqxR2JQsFJqM0uwtvhrhpWBGMQJ_DYXqzOl-DkLu_oKj3xTiXuijGLVcLLSnq1pyoIsbAWnkBqVFEneiLJYmJRHU4SlpHm-nLp13YcBiPyKfkryQWGK4b-q_0TuuWclmtITPU/s400/blue-gray+gnatcatcher+side.jpg)
It's never an easy task to photograph the itsy-bitsies of the bird world. They almost never stop hoppin, flying, jumping, flitting, you get the point.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgoAWBO2euqLGsgKphjmExSiCcZvFRDg9m1uUYMmp0bX72iCzti5enPKBZKbZkziN9qcKkL_1FNX4fSZjyTpdL4AA6PxzIqszm_guDghJvZP9ySFX_NjJ-783N-ODe5YGc2P44fGsDHkxk/s400/blue-gray+gnatcatcher+front.jpg)
Blue-gray Gnatcatchers are a tiny, long-tailed bird of deciduous forests and scrublands, & makes itself known by its soft but emphatic "spee" calls and its constant motion. By flicking its white-edged tail from side to side, the gnatcatcher may scare up hiding insects. (Source: All About Birds)
2 comments:
Great pictures but giving you the evil eye in the second picture.
Both great pictures, but I LOVE the expression on its face in the second one! :)
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