WILD FONTAINEBLEAU
The wild spaces of southeast Louisiana’s Fontainebleau State Park keep revealing their treasures to me, even after five-plus years of too many visits to count. It is in those spaces where I’ve started to recognize the layers of life that exist in the park’s diverse habitats. And it is in those spaces where my love of birds first took hold.
Fontainebleau first hooked me, probably like most visitors, with its bigger, easy-to-spot wildlife – white-tailed deer, brown pelicans, great egrets, bald eagles, and, of course, alligators. The impossible beauty of the iconic live oak trees draped with Spanish moss and resurrection ferns didn’t escape me either.
But as I went back again and again, I started to notice the smaller things. Butterflies and bumblebees bounced along the flowering plants in spring and skinks shuffled through piles of leaves in fall. Voices of songbirds and chorus frogs became the soundtrack for meandering walks along the trails. And although I still haven’t spotted a chorus frog, I now have a deep connection to the birds of Fontainebleau, who easily have become my favorite photo subjects.
As for those famous moss-covered, live oaks, I’ve now spent a lot of time peering into them with the help of a telephoto lens and found a small but busy world that I never knew existed. In the tangle of moss and ferns lies a rich habitat where a seemingly endless array of birds and insects go about their days.
In the same vein, where I used to see only a broad-brush scene of woodlands and marshes, now I can see so much more. Tiny mushrooms pop out of bright-green moss. Native irises bring vibrant purple to an otherwise dark swamp. The tall dead trees that line Lake Pontchartrain’s shore and the marshes serve as perches for osprey, eagles, hawks and kingfishers as they hunt in the waters below. In the woodlands, the dead trees offer homes for woodpeckers – pileated, northern flickers, red-bellied, red-headed and yellow-bellied sapsuckers.
The wild spaces of Fontainebleau have helped me grow my skills as a nature photographer but, more importantly, have encouraged me to be a voice for the birds and wildlife relying on such protected lands. The wild spaces also have provided me with a place just to be quiet in nature and restore as a person.
Made in love and gratitude is this collection of photographs.
All images are copyrighted © 2015-2021 Elizabeth Acevedo. All rights reserved.
For image licensing or other business inquiries, contact me at elizabeth@elizabethacevedophotography.com