Snail Kite takes a snail…
photos.app.goo.gl/7aQFBFp5kG34mN7w2
As promised, here is the full sequence of the Snail Kite at Lake Yojoa in Honduras taking and eating a snail. It is a video slide-show of images from the Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Image quality is somewhat constrained by the video format, but you will get the idea. Images processed in Polarr and the slide show assembled and saved in FrameMagic. Unfortunately uploading the file to YouTube for display on WordPress results in a very low quality video, so I am going to have to ask you to use the link to view it on Google Photos, where the quality is much better.
Here is a teaser frame.

Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl

Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl, Panacam Lodge, Honduras
I saw 4 different species of daylight owl during my 10 days in the highlands of Honduras with Alex Alvarado of Honduran Birds, and at least 6 different individuals. The one we saw the most often was the Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl, which has to be the most common of the Pygmy-Owls, and perhaps the most common Owl of any kind, in Honduras. This was from an early morning walk on my last day in Honduras, before we headed back to the airport. Such a great pose. And it looks like he has prey in his talon as well. Looks to be a very large bug…perhaps a dragonfly. This is a tiny owl. When you see them in flight they look smaller than an American Robin. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 320. Processed in Polarr.
Yellow-naped Parrot
Yellow-naped Parrot, Macaw Mountain, Copan Ruins, Honduras.
For some reason it is hard for me to imagine the large parrots, mostly seen in zoos and cages, as free-flying, wild birds…but of course, on their home ranges, they all are. This Yellow-naped Parrot, or Yellow-naped Amazon, is a case in point. I had to ask my guide, Alex of Honduran Birds, if the parrot was native to the Copan Ruins area where we were seeing it…especially as we were on the grounds of a bird rehabilitation center that specializes in pet-trade rescue. He assured me that historically, the Yellow-naped Parrot has always nested in small numbers in the area, though it is more common in the Pacific Slope lowlands of Guatemala and El Salvador. This one was not banded, and was coming with other wild birds to the feeders at the coffee shop at Macaw Mountain Bird Center. Sony RX10iv at 400mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 1600. Processed in Polarr. Note the unique cantilever feeders that allow the food to be swung out from the deck and human seating a good 12 feet.
White-necked Puffbird

White-necked Puffbird, El Cajon Region, Honduras
When we went in search of the Honduran Emerald in the El Cajon Region, above the hydro-electric dam, our guide for the day, Alex, who owns El Rancho Restaurant and Hotel just inside the El Cajon gate, took us first to sit under the White-necked Puffbird nest and wait for the appearance of the bird. White-necked Puffbirds (or at least this White-necked Puffbird) nest in a termite ball high in a tree. They drill a hole in the side like their Kingfisher and Jacamar cousins do in a dirt bank. A living termite ball…I asked. All mod cons, including easy access to food for the young! The Puffbird came back to the nest after a short watch, but remained semi-hidden in the foliage right above us. It often, according to Alex, sits fully exposed on vines in front of the nest…but not on the day we visited. Puffbirds are patient sit-and-wait predators, and this one seemed quite happy to sit and wait right where it landed. The photography was not impossible and after about 30 minutes we moved on…we did have Honduran Emeralds to see after all. But what a great bird…and my best looks ever! Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 500. Processed in Polarr.
Yellow-tailed Oriole

Yellow-tailed Oriole, Santa Cruz, Honduras
The Yellow-tailed Oriole is something of a mystery in Honduras. It is supper abundant in Belize, and Guatemala, and its range extends into Honduras…the range map shows it as occurring all through the eastern rain-forest, and in isolated areas in the rain-forest of the north coast, but in fact it is rarely seen. There is, however, a healthy population in the pine forest and mountain slopes of Parque Nacional Cerro Azul Meambar near the hydro-electric project above Santa Cruz de Yojoa. You can stop beside the road and play their calls and they will come to investigate. It is the only place in Honduras where they are regularly and easily seen. Like I say, mysterious. The Yellow-tailed Oriole is certainly a striking bird, as seen here, feeding on small berries. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 100. Processed in Polarr.
Collared Trogon

Collared Trogon, Panacam Lodge, Honduras
This is just about the last bird pic I took on my Honduran trip. I am back at home now. I woke on the morning of my last day thinking that I would really like a trogon shot to end the trip. I had some excellent shots of the Mountain Trogon, and some okay shots of the Gartered, but Trogons are generally easier than that in Honduras. I did not tell Alex about my wish, but this Collared Trogon responded to Alex’s calls and gave us good views on either side of the lawn at Panacam Lodge. In separating the red trogons, it is all about the tail pattern…and none is more striking than the Collared. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 500. Processed in Polarr.
Honduran Emerald

Honduran Emerald, Santa Cruz, Honduras
The Honduran Emerald is the only endemic species of bird in Honduras. There is a Honduran Emerald Reserve in the Augan Valley where almost everyone who sees a Honduran Emerald sees the bird. It is long why from everywhere a birder might be staying and generally involves spending much of the day on a bus coming and going. Plus it is dry thorn forest, and the temperatures can reach over 100 degrees most days. A few people, however, know about a second population, quite near Panacam Lodge, in the mountains above Santa Cruz near the hydroelectric project. It is much easier to get to, and being higher, mixed pine and oak forest, is much more pleasant to bird. My guide Alex, first found the birds there, and his friend, another Alex, who owns a local restaurant, has located several populations in different areas of forest. We went yesterday and found the Honduran Emerald almost immediately (after a visit to the resident Yellow-tailed Orioles and a nesting White-necked Puffbird). The Emerald is easy to see in the area, and lines of sight are better for photography, but the light in the semi-open forest can be a challenge. I caught this Honduran Emerald yawning (I think). Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode, +1 EV. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 500. Processed in Polarr.
Pieces of Crake

Ruddy Crake, La Tigra National Park, Honduras
On our way up to La Tigra National Park the other day, we stopped just before the gate to look for, among other things, a Ruddy Crake. There was a little overgrown stream there, just what Crakes like…and typically difficult to see a Crake in. Hence Pieces of Crake. But then you can’t have your Crake and photograph it too…or something like that. Only the last of these shots is critically sharp, and that not by much, but still, you get the idea of Ruddy Crake. 🙂 Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. Processed in Polarr and assembled in FrameMagic. (I am again posting this early, as we are off in search of the Honduran Emerald tomorrow early.)
Snail Kite takes a snail!

Snail Kite, Lake Yojoa, Honduras
We are off to the mountains of Santa Barbara above Panacam Lodge in Honduras early tomorrow in search of the Ornate Hawk Eagle (and maybe Resplendent Quetzals 🙂 so I am making tomorrow’s Pic for today post early. This is a Snail Kite along the edge of Lake Yojoa, below Panacam Lodge. Lake Yojoa is the largest natural lake in Honduras and major attraction for both birds and vacationing Hondurans. They farm a lot of tilapia in the lake as well. And, evidently, there are a lot of snails, as both Snail Kites and Limpkins are plentiful. I always say wildlife photography (any photography for that matter) is mostly about being in the right place at the right time and ready. I was experimenting with a new focus mode and having some success when this Snail Kite came banking in and snatched the snail from the water. I was ready. The camera was ready. And the rest is told by the image. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode with modifications for birds and wildlife. The focus mode I was using was “lock on Auto Focus (which is what Sony calls “follow focus”) using the small flexible spot”. It works really well. I have the complete sequence of the kite striking the water and flying off with the snail (which I will post when I get home). 1/640th @ f4 @ ISO 100. Processed in Polarr.
Wine-throated Hummingbird

Wine-throated Hummingbird, La Tigra National Park, Honduras
This Wine-throated Hummingbird at La Tigra National Park in Honduras made us work for our shots, but it was certainly worth it. It is tiny and gorgeous. The large (by hummingbird standards) wine-colored gorget is often flared and catches the light brilliantly. This male was working a patch of flowering trees down off the trail and we had to bushwhack through raspberry briars, over downed pine trees and all their branches, and through man-high ferns to find a vantage where we could observe and photograph it. Alex, my guide, encouraged me by saying it would be the shot of the trip, and it comes close. Certainly one my favorite birds so far. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 640. Processed in Polarr.