I never understood the appeal of visiting marshes until I discovered the black-necked stilt.
Aren’t they lovely? I found them in a small marsh near Monterey, CA. Black-necked stilts are social birds, so you frequently see them in groups. I couldn’t get any pictures of both of them in focus, so the above picture is here to show two together and how they look in their native habitat.
The Monterey Bay Aquarium has an indoor aviary with local birds and the black-necked stilt is included. Here you can see his long beak, which is used for eating insects and spearing aquatic invertebrates.
When you compare the ratio of the black-necked stilt’s legs to the rest of his body, these birds have the longest legs of any North American bird. When they walk, their strides are long and their movements delicate.
This is the only picture where I captured the red in his eye and his puffy underside. My field guide refers to the underside as “clean white underparts,” which makes me giggle.

I love, love, love these guys. Great pictures of them! T
Thanks T!
[...] was the first time I took out the 150-300mm lens that Jon bought me. The first bird that I really observed with the lens was the Black-Necked Stilt. I’m so grateful that I get to see them all summer [...]