![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_HicNBZFt7KvFYc_D2OlNY0dzoTljXp7Etw68NpmRb0ZZrOPsbzetGcR8kgMQZWqNL3gVcUfJrMjtgtUQZrFHrtDbINFZ8eijGZclRGXQcswPCmpqnn73VqaV4_uIkh5USvMCDA1mRRC-/s320/fawn1.jpg)
Spotted fawn in the Union cemetery. (Click to enlarge.)
His cute little fuzzy close-up:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg8t9a-wls85fKZ9RDKEf3iu1IlympXO6NsUKMtdF4fr-emIsIvG7P7ZMY50QtIgOr67ECdcBl-hyKU20yMxoSRZAOeUQgv9NGyxAhvOwRpnMWfoxdaWt-mdc_fVaLCcos3yaE9uede3ZhZ/s320/fawn3.jpg)
Awww.
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It was a very birdy weekend. This wasn't really a birding trip, but we did have our binoculars, so we looked every time we happened to see the branches moving. The list of warblers we saw without even really trying:
Yellow-throated
Black-and-White
Magnolia
Canada
Chestnut-sided
Redstart
Pine
Palm
Brewster's (!)
Tennessee
The gorgeous male Canada warbler was a special treat since we hadn't seen one in so long. And the Brewster's, wow! They are a hybrid between the Blue-winged and Golden-winged warblers, and we'd only seen one once or twice before, at Dauphin Island.
If we'd had more time, we'd have turned it into a birding trip until the migration fallout ran dry, and finished exploring the battlefield later. The weather was beautiful - the first fall-like days of the year.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvEBNDcoXicv_xTvnYBTDqq0DEhRYCBaUMfPQTIAzvuUNUeZ40HtxpyeGGTMZGXSFWA98mZWTerceutIUXR9GEfgelv2CjQHul5SUsLS7Gv0GFqG7p2tjCp-W4x1vFen6Yhf2o-gcJcVDX/s320/pickrest.jpg)
Just resting.
Eastern Bluebird (Sialia sialis).
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