Heron

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This is about the bird. For other uses, see Heron (disambiguation).


The Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) is a wading bird common all over the U.S. and Canada (except in deserts and high mountains, where there is no water for it to wade in) that stands in shallow water and spears fish or frogs with its long, sharp bill, and it does that in goldfish ponds in back yards as well as anywhere else. The Great Blue stands four feet tall and has a seven-foot wingspan. The "Great White Heron," which was long thought to be a separate species, is an immature Great Blue -- their feathers do not turn the characteristic blue-gray until the bird is a few years old.

Great Grey Heron thumbnail
Larger Great Grey Heron