An ibis flying overhead, its wings illuminated by the rising sun.
#myphoto
thanks for your feedback.
@walli That is amazing - great picture!
Thanks for your comment!
@walli image description: the ibis is a bird with a long neck; long, downward-curving beak; and big wings. In this photo the wings are down. The outer edge is a line of the black feather tips, followed by a wide band that looks peach coloured from backlighting from the morning sun. The rest of the wing is bluish shadow.
@walli holy cow, this is a beautiful photo.
Well done 
๐Ÿ„ ๐Ÿ‘๐Ÿ˜
@walli Nicely captured and lovely tones
@walli @shadowsminder This is a very fine picture. Thank you. โค๏ธ
Thanks for your comment. ๐Ÿ˜

@walli

Yowzaa!

Guess, this is an expression of joy! Thanks.

@walli great shot!

I know so many birds photographers that avoid back lit photos. They would never get a shot like this.

Hi. Yes, I also do know a few. I must admit that I was pretty lucky though. Thanks for your feed-back.
@walli In Australia, we call these birds (unflatteringly) โ€˜Bin Chickensโ€™. As theyโ€™re usually found scavenging through rubbish. Hard to reconcile against this incredibly beautiful photo.
Hi, thanks for your feedback. I'm not sure if you're right or if you're confusing the Ibis with the Egret. As far as I know, ibises feed on aquatic insects, frogs etc. Egrets are indeed often seen on garbage dumps, where they hang out with other birds.

@walli Nope, in Australia the (Australian white) Ibis is a Bin Chicken: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_white_ibis

Youโ€™ve managed to capture a particularly majestic bin chicken though!

Australian white ibis - Wikipedia

@walli @meaden We have a species of Ibis in Australia called the Australian white ibis. Originally native to the Murray river delta, as that vast ecosystem has gradually declined due to human activity in recent decades, a sub group has become endemic to the east coast cities where they thrive on human food waste and worms in irrigated parkland. Some have suggested the populations have diverged enough to become separate species. Yes, we call them bin chickens.
@walli @meaden Your photo is amazing by the way!
@walli Absolutely beautiful.