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Bruce Cole | all galleries >> Galleries >> Birds of Tennessee > Cedar Waxwing
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04-JAN-2004

Cedar Waxwing

Canon EOS 20D
1/125s f/5.6 at 390.0mm iso100 hide exif
Full EXIF Info
Date/Time04-Jan-2004 05:47:09
MakeCanon
ModelCanon EOS 20D
Flash UsedNo
Focal Length390 mm
Exposure Time1/125 sec
Aperturef/5.6
ISO Equivalent100
Exposure Bias
White Balance
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality
Exposure Programshutter priority (2)
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium large original auto
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Philip Ellis 19-Jul-2020 13:21
Flock of maybe 100 catching bugs over the water near the parking lot to the trail to Burgess Falls. So beautiful. Seemed to have no fear of humans. We were wading and they were catching bugs in mid-air all around us.
Jason 17-Apr-2018 13:45
I had about a dozen of these land on my porch and they liked my nut & berry flavored suet cake 12/2017 Ash North Carolina.
Billwilliamkeffer@comcast.net 03-Apr-2018 20:36
Just found a dead Cedar Waxwing under my Holly tree in Chattanooga. I don’t think I’ve seen one around here before.i took pictures to verify what kind of bird I’d found . Beautiful bird with no visible injuries. 4-2-18
Guest 04-May-2017 11:51
Just had a whole flock work through my trees in the backyard. Very entertaining
Knoxville 37920
Dan 31-Mar-2017 13:23
Saw a flock of 15-20 of these yesterday. They like the Berries on our Holly Bush.
Guest 14-Jan-2017 20:53
Found a baby clinging to my water hose late summer. Brought him in for fear he wouldn't make it thru the night due to the farm cat. Fed him small PC of apples. Mama was loud in the trees. When I realized she had waited for him all night, I released him to her while cat was gone. He never flew, but she went from tree to tree, and he followed her on the ground until he entered cedar thicket. Named him Jose' because he was found on the water hose! Zip code 37050
Tony Plá 08-Mar-2013 16:43
Three showed up at my feeder - two females and one male. I live one mile from the beginning of Natchez Trace Pkwy. They are absolutely gorgeous.
TobyGrey 21-Jan-2013 18:21
We're seeing a small flock of nine of these Cedar Waxwing's. They're extrodinarly attractive exoctic-looking birds. US-TN-37221 area. These Cedar Waxwing's are not usually around here, so they must be migrating or seasonaly moving here. They don't seem interested in bird seed, so we're guessing they eat similar to the Robin-Redbreast, or Mockingbirds.