2025 Southeast Texas Gulf Coast

In late February 2025, armed with our new Canon 200-800mm telephoto zoom lenses—and the added power of a 2X extender giving us up to a staggering 1600mm of reach—we set out on a thrilling photographic safari along the Southeastern Texas Gulf Coast. Our mission: to “hunt” birds through the lens, capturing the intricate dance of wings, feathers, and flight in stunning detail.

Our first stop was Crystal Beach, where shorebirds darted across the sand, their reflections shimmering in the surf. At High Island, both the Boy Scout Woods and Smith Oaks Sanctuary gave us front-row seats to nature’s drama. Smith Oaks, with its rookery buzzing with life, quickly became a favorite. Egrets, spoonbills, and herons nested in tangled branches just yards away, offering up intimate shots of nesting behavior, midair landings, and fish-flinging feeding frenzies.

From Galveston Island State Park to the windswept trails of the Gulf Coast Bird Observatory at Smith Point HawkWatch, our lenses picked out distant raptors circling on thermals and tiny warblers flitting like sparks in the underbrush. The silence of Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge was broken only by the flapping of wings and the occasional splash of an alligator slipping into the marsh.

At Sea Rim State Park, one of our top highlights, we stood at the edge of the Gulf as a wide variety of sea birds skimmed the waves in golden light. The raw, remote beauty of this coastal gem gave us close-ups shots of birds in motion. Just down the road, the McFaddin National Wildlife Refuge offered hauntingly beautiful marshlands where ibis, ducks, and egrets moved like ghosts through the fog.

Each stop revealed a different face of the Gulf Coast, and our cameras captured it all—feathers in flight, wildflowers blooming in salty air, and endless horizons where land and sky blurred together. It was a birder’s dream, a photographer’s paradise, and an adventure we’ll never forget.

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