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  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-2.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) flaps its wings to dry after rolling in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing-5.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) flaps its wings to dry after rolling in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) ruffles its feathers to help dry them after rolling in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing-7.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) flaps its wings to dry after rolling in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing-6.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) flaps its wings to dry after rolling in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing-4.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) rolls in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing-2.jpg
  • A Canada goose (Branta canadensis) shakes its head after rolling in the waters of Lake Springfield in Springfield, Missouri. Canada geese will roll in water, then flatly bang their wings on the water, then finish by waving the wings back and forth to dry, with a good ruffling of feathers for good measure.<br />
<br />
Canada geese are particularly fastidious about keeping their feathers clean and dry, pulling dirt and water off each feather using the ridges on their mandibles. A good shake and ruffling of their feathers will get them dry. That is followed by oiling their feathers with their bill with oil from the base of their tail. The oil keeps the feathers insulated, dry, and free of parasites.
    Canada goose bathing-3.jpg
  • A fall frost delicately adheres to the leaves of a butterfly bush in a backyard in Springfield, Mo. Editor's note -- Image is a focus blend/focus stacked image.
    Frost on butterfly bush.jpg
  • A fall frost delicately adheres to a spider web in a backyard in Springfield, Mo.
    Frost on a spider web.jpg
  • A broad-winged hawk waits patiently for a bird to approach a backyard bird feeder in Springfield, Mo. EDITORS NOTE: The hawk was photographed very near to the bird feeder. This should not be considered a wild/natural situation due to the presence of the backyard feeder. Caption for this photo must  indicate that the photo of the hawk was taken in a backyard near a bird feeder.
    Broad-winged hawk-3.jpg
  • A broad-winged hawk waits patiently for a bird to approach backyard bird feeders in Springfield, Mo. EDITORS NOTE: The hawk was photographed very near to the bird feeder. This should not be considered a wild/natural situation due to the presence of the backyard feeder. Caption for this photo must  indicate that the photo of the hawk was taken in a backyard near a bird feeder.
    Broad-winged hawk-4.jpg
  • Cedo25+ after party-4.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-5.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-3.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-4.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-3.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-2.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-13.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-5.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-8.jpg
  • Butterfly weed (Asclepias tuberosa) is a favorite of monarch butterflies and caterpillars. Monarchs are known for their seasonal lengthy migration, they migrate from the United States and Canada south to California and Mexico for the winter.
    Monarch caterpillar on butterfly wee...jpg
  • Cedo25+ after party-3.jpg
  • Cedo25+ after party-2.jpg
  • Cedo25+ after party.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-6.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-5.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-14.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-11.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-10.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-8.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-7.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-4.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-3.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-6.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-4.jpg
  • Cedo25+ after party-5.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-9.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-6.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition video “Play Your ...jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition-2.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition testimonial.jpg
  • Cedo 25+ exhibition dedication.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-7.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama.jpg
  • Cedo25+ exhibition panorama-9.jpg
  • Louis Shoptaugh, a tourist from Springfield, Mo. poses with a taxidermied moose on display at the American Bald Eagle Foundation in Haines, Alaska. <br />
<br />
The American Bald Eagle Foundation, founded in 1982, is a popular tourism attraction. Here tourists can see live raptor demonstrations and interpretive wildlife displays. The foundation also sponsors the Alaska Bald Eagle Festival during the fall for a gathering of bald eagles that is among the largest in the world. The foundation’s website says that it is a non-profit foundation "dedicated to the protection and preservation of bald eagle habitat through sponsoring and facilitating educational and research activities."
    Tourist poses with stuffed moose.jpg