Singing Quail

Singing Quail, La Tigra National Park, Honduras

A Singing Quail responded to their calls and came right up to the edge of the trail in La Tigra National Park on my visit with Alex Alvarado and Honduran Birds yesterday. And sang. And sang loudly and with great vigor! It is dark in the cloud-forest at the best of times and a real challenge for photography, but I am pleased with the results. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/50th @ f4 @ ISO 6400. Processed, including some noise control, in Polarr.

Emerald Toucanet

Emerald Toucanet, Los Gloriales Inn, near La Tigra National Park, Honduras

We got to Los Gloriales Inn near across the valley from La Tigra National Park in time for some afternoon birding in intermittent rain. My best views ever of Emerald Toucanet! Not ideal lighting, but what a bird. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 1250.

Mountain Trogon

Mountain Trogon, Opatoro Highlands, Honduras

We spent the day yesterday in the Opatoro Highlands, down near the El Salvadoran border in Honduras…searching for mountain specialties…this Mountain Trogon, among them. Certainly a beautiful bird. It took a while for the male to show himself in the open, but patience paid off. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 1250. Processed in Polarr.

Turquoise-browed Motmot

Turquoise-browed Motmot, Copan Ruins, Honduras

In the field dawn to dark tomorrow here in the highlands of Honduras right down along the El Salvador border, so here is an early Pic for today from yesterday at Copan Ruins. Turquoise-browed Motmot delivering a spider to growing chick in a hole between two of the stones of the ancient structure. We watching this pair of Motmots for more than a hour and saw them make 20 or more deliveries to their hungry chicks. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. 1/1000th @ f4 @ ISO 1250. Processed in Polarr.

Magnificent Scarlet Macaws

Scarlet Macaws, Copan Ruins, Honduras

A few years ago, efforts were made to reintroduce Scarlet Macaws to the Mayan Ruins at Copan, Honduras. The Macaw was sacred to the Mayans, and figures in the stone works and carvings of the site…and was, during Mayan times, a common bird of the region. It was expatriated many years ago, in the United Fruit era, when changes to the landscape for agriculture drove it out. The reintroduction has been a success, and there are about 20 pairs of Macaws flying free at the Ruins and nesting. There are chicks in the nests. And they have spread out from the Ruins to the surrounding area, so you see Macaws nesting in the hills and mountains around town. We were at the Ruins at feeding time…9 AM sharp, when fresh fruits are put out on feeding platforms along the entry-way to the main ruins. The birds come in close. As you stand near the feeders you have Macaws all around you. The challenge with big bright, hyper-active birds like the Macaws, is to get them in the frame at all, and I found myself resorting to a radical “point and shoot” method. I did not even attempt to frame the birds in the viewfinder or on the LCD, I simply pointed the camera at them and shot off a burst, moving the camera with the birds and hoping that the tracking auto-focus and auto-exposure would take care of the rest. It worked remarkably well…better than I had hoped, and I have some wonderful images to prove it. 🙂 This shot is of two birds contesting the feeding platform and is part of sequence of maybe 30 shots. It is all about color and action! Magnificent Macaws indeed. Sony RX10iv at 290mm. Program mode with birds-in-flight and action modifications. 1/1000th @ f4 @ ISO 500. Processed in Polarr. Full frame shot.

First bird in Honduras

Lesson’s Motmot, Clarion Hotel, Copan Ruins, Honduras

This is not the first bird I saw in Honduras this trip, of course. There were flybys on the road and both Black and Turkey Vultures everywhere, blackbirds around the hotel and doves…but this Lesson’s Motmot is the first bird I stopped to photograph in Honduras…just as it was the first bird I photographed in Costa Rica last year. Lesson’s Motmot has to have a high chance of being the first compelling photograph worthy bird in any Central American country you visit…and if the Lesson’s Motmot does not stop you and get your camera up, then you really are just too jaded to be in the tropics anyway! This bird, typically, was sitting on a branch under deep canopy in the semi-darkness, but it was very cooperative, turning on its branch so to give me a view of all sides. That tail is really something. They tell me that the tail feathers are not that way when they first come in…that the bob at the end is a wear pattern, but it is so consistent in Motmots that I, with my limited knowledge of their behavior, can not imagine how it always wears just that perfect way to produce the bob. It was dark in the tropical dry forest where I found this bird, and the exposures are pushing the limits of my Sony’s 1 inch sensor. I hope to find more Lesson’s Motmots in better light before the trip is over. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode with the ISO set to keep shutter speed at 1/500th. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 2000. Processed in Polarr.

Magnolia’s stare

Magnolia Warbler, Magee Marsh Wildlife Area, Oak Harbor, Ohio

Chestnut-sided Warblers were not the only ones working close to the boardwalk at Magee Marsh Wildlife Area on the last days of the Biggest Week in American Birding. Magnolia Warblers were so close that my friend Rich got an excellent shot with his cell phone when they were too close for me to focus at 600mm. This shot is at 600mm. Sony RX10iv. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 500. Processed in Polarr.

Chestnut-sided coming at me…

Chestnut-sided Warbler, Magee Marsh Wildlife Area, Oak Harbor, Ohio

When Chestnut-sided Warblers are intent on feeding, they are very intent. I am glad, all things considered, that this Chestnut-sided at Magee Marsh Wildlife Area on the Erie Shore in Ohio, was intent on small insects and not on me. That is a very fierce look. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ ISO 800 @ f4. Processed in Polarr.

House Wren in song

House Wren, Magee Marsh Wildlife Area, Oak Harbor, Ohio

A pair of Prothonotary Warblers was cleaning out a potential nest hole right next to the boardwalk at Magee Marsh. (Magee Marsh Wildlife Area in Oak Harbor, Ohio.) Predictably a pair of House Wrens showed up to challenge them. This male spent hours singing around the hole, claiming it for its own. In the end I don’t think either pair ended up nesting in the hole…which is probably just as well since it was only a few feet from the passing human traffic, and only maybe 4 feet from the ground with easy access for predators. Still they put a lot of energy into trying to claim the site. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 500. Processed in Polarr.

Yellow singing

Yellow Warbler, Magee Marsh Wildlife Area, Oak Harbor, Ohio

The Yellow Warbler is, perhaps, the most common warbler along the Magee Marsh Boardwalk on the Erie Shore of Ohio during migration. It might be outnumbered by Magnolia or Black-throated Green, or Chestnut-sided on individual days, but the Yellow is a nesting bird all across North America and has the staying power and numbers to win the overall title. I think. That is certainly how it appears most years on the boardwalk. Being common we birders tend not to pay them as much attention. You can spot a “non-birder” on the boardwalk easily…they are the ones super excited by Yellow Warblers (and generally the ones trying to photograph them with their cell phones). But we birders, at least those of us who ignore “just another yellow”, are wrong. There is no reason not to get excited about a Yellow Warbler. It is among the most beautiful of warblers with its bright yellow, red streaked, plumage and its bold song…and they sing a lot. This bird was holding forth on the East end of the boardwalk on one of my final early evening visits. I am as guilty as anyone of paying too little attention to Yellows, until one jumps up and sings in my face, so that I have to take its photo. Sony RX10iv at 600mm. Program mode. 1/500th @ f4 @ ISO 320. Processed in Polarr.