![]() ![]() The swamp is all a-buzz with party preparations galore! Naturally, the turtles are running late, and Bully the Frog is being a bully. Also available: Preview CD (with vocals & dialog), Preview Pak (1 Preview CD and sample pages), Performance/Accompaniment CD, and a Classroom Kit with Teacher/Singer and AUDIO ACCESS for extra value! Approximate Performance Time: 20 minutes. The ENHANCED Teacher Edition with Singer PDFs includes piano/vocal arrangements with choreography, helpful production guide with staging and costume suggestions, teaching objectives linked to the National Standards for each song, PLUS REPRODUCIBLE and PROJECTABLE singer parts available via DIGITAL ACCESS. Lessons of friendship, tolerance, courage to face the future, and more, abound! This 25-minute musical party features five original songs and easy-to-learn rhyming dialog with over 40 speaking parts. The tadpoles are growing appendages (yikes!) and the dragonfly larvae need encouragement to spread their wings and fly. The frogs have learned a new dance they want to share. I was glad to have so many immature Song Sparrows in my viewfinder that were out in the open on the ground and perched up higher.Ĭlick here to see more of my Song Sparrow photos plus facts and information about this species.The swamp is all a-buzz with party preparations galore! Naturally, the turtles are running late, and Bully the Frog is being a bully. I am sure that it won’t be long before this young Song Sparrow has a tail once again. I never got views of its fluffy little butt where I could see anything more than a few short tail feathers that have begun to grow in. This immature Song Sparrow showed up and right away I noticed that it was tailless. Tailless immature Song Sparrow – Nikon D500, f7.1, 1/1000, ISO 500, -0.3 EV, Nikkor 500mm VR with 1.4x TC, natural light This young sparrow looked just a bit older than the one in the first photo and it may not be a sibling to it because there were several adult Song Sparrows nearby so there may be a few other families in the same area. Later on in the morning another immature Song Sparrow popped up on a branch near the dry creek bed and it also looked in my direction. Immature Song Sparrow high in the Wasatch Mountain Range – Nikon D500, f7.1, 1/1000, ISO 500, -0.3 EV, Nikkor 500mm VR with 1.4x TC, natural light When it landed on this stump I was pleased that I took a few images of it looking in my direction in the early morning light. ![]() This was the first of the Song Sparrow chicks I photographed two days ago in the Wasatch Mountains. In fact there were a few times I had both young Song Sparrows and Spotted Sandpiper chicks in the same frame but one or the other species was not in focus unfortunately! I took these photos the same day I photographed the Spotted Sandpiper chicks that I shared here yesterday. ![]() Juvenile Song Sparrow on a stump – Nikon D500, f7.1, 1/1000, ISO 500, Nikkor 500mm VR with 1.4x TC, natural lightĮarlier this week I shared an image of a young Song Sparrow that I had taken last year and I mentioned that I hadn’t taken any images of them out in the open yet this year, well the Universe must have read that post because it gifted me with several young Song Sparrows out in the open a few days later. ![]()
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