About

Ed is an octogenarian artist and writer. He has spent many of his years observing birds in their natural habitat throughout the USA and Canada. Over this time, he has developed a unique expertise of these creatures, as well as the environmental factors that affect them.

In his writings and paintings birds are depicted as he sees them in nature. Through this traditional expression, it is his hope that the paintings reveal not only how the birds appear, yet also their attitude, character, action and life-style.

Ed lives and works on the North Shore of Boston, MA.

5 Responses

  1. Shirley Flanagan

    Hello Ed,
    This website is a tribute to you and your talents. Its great to be a part of your life and thanks for the talents you have created in me to write, edit and produce work that can inspire others.

    Shirley Flanagan.

  2. Thank you, Shirley, for the kind words.

  3. Hi. I like the way you write. Will you post some more articles?

  4. Didjaknow almost everything about albatrosses is superlative and extreme? Tip to tip the wandering albatross spreads its wings eleven feet and weighs in at twenty-six pounds: probably the largest flighted bird on the planet.

    Samuel Taylor Colridge wrote about the albatross in his “Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner” which really doesn’t tell much about the bird and they are mentioned in most of the field guides of the world. But you must go to the far reaches of the Pacific Ocean to get near these guys, or you can read Carl Safina’s “Eye of the Albatross, Visions of Hope and Survival.” It is a “WOW!” of a book.

  5. Gary, thank you. Yes, I will be posting more.

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