Posts in Category: action

Cedar Waxwing berry toss…

Cedar Waxwing, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

My session with the birds at Roger’s Pond Park last week was very productive. I got lots of great action shots of the American Robins and Cedar Waxwings feeding. This Cedar Waxwing is demonstrating the proper technique for small berries. It involves plucking the berry with the very tips of the beak, and then tossing so that it can be swallowed in mid-air. Imagine if we had to eat that way 🙂 I have a feeling that would cure the obesity epidemic in America in short order.

Sony RX10iii at 1200mm equivalent field of view (2x Clear Image zoom). Processed in Polarr on my iPad Pro. 

Handsome Robin…

American Robin, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

Another shot of the handsome American Robins feeding in the berry bushes at Roger’s Pond Park in Kennebunk Maine. I know, they are only Robins, but in winter we nature photographers can’t be picky! (And it does not help any in summer either.) And Robins are indeed handsome birds. Not beautiful, mind you, but certainly very handsome. 

Sony RX10iii at 600mm equivalent field of view. 1/400th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Processed and cropped for scale in Polarr on my iPad Pro. 

Acrobatic Cedar Waxwing

Cedar Waxwings, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

The Cedar Waxwings the other day were getting into all kinds of interesting positions while feeding the other day. They were a joy to watch as they angled for the choicest berries.

Sony RX10iii at 600mm equivalent field of view. Around 1/500th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Processed in Polarr and assembled in PicStitch on my iPad Pro.

Red-tailed Hawk, view two.

Red-tailed Hawk, Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve at Laudholm Farm, Wells Maine

If you read yesterday’s post, you know that I got more than the one shot I shared of the Red-tailed Hawk at Laudholm Farms (Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve at…). And as I mentioned, it allowed me to approach much closer than I expected. This shot is at 1200mm equivalent field of view, but still… Such a magnificent bird!

Sony RX10iii at 1200mm equivalent field of view (2x Clear Image Zoom). 1/500th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Processed in Polarr on my Android tablet. 

Red-tailed Hawk, and a poem :)

Red-tailed Hawk, National Estuarine Research Reserve at Laudholm Farm, Wells Maine

There is a poem:

When I first pulled into the parking lot
at Laudholm Farms, I glanced out the
driver’s side window to see a hawk
sitting on the Bluebird House 40 yards
away. I grabbed for the camera, but 
by the time I got it out and on, and 
reached for the handle to roll down
the window, the Hawk was gone.

Surely too big for a Cooper’s Hawk?

Still I got out and wandered over 
toward the corner of the woodlot
beyond the bird house, in case it had 
not gone far…and, surprise, there it
was on the ground 4 feet behind the
rough hedge along the fence between
the parking lot and field. It was away
again before I could get on it, but it
landed in the low branch of a big oak
at the edge. I got a few shots, mostly
obscured by branches and a few dried
leaves still clinging on…but then it
swooped and landed again on the 
ground behind the hedge. Now there
was a big enough gap just there so I
could focus through the winter twigs,
and I took its portrait as it danced and
pounced on something small in the 
frozen grasses at its feet. Up again
to perch in an old maple by the road.

This time I caught the unmistakable 
flash of rust red on the tail. Ah!

The Red-tailed Hawk perched with its back 
to me, and let me get a lot closer than I 
expected, looking over its shoulder every 
once in a while to see what I was doing.

Magnificent! The beak and eye…the
intricate cryptology of feather detail
of one of nature’s ultimate birds of prey.

In the end it had enough of my looking at it, 
and flew off down the treeline another 40 
yards. I let it go. Thrilled to my bones,
entirely blessed, to have been part of its day.

This is, clearly, one of the portraits behind the hedge. Sony RX10iii at 600mm equivalent field of view. Program Mode. 1/800th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Cropped for scale and composition and processed in Snapseed on my Android tablet. Wells National Estuarine Research Reserve at Laudholm Farm in Wells Maine. 

Cedar Waxwing among berries…

Cedar Waxwing, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

As I have mentioned, I got a lot of good shots of Cedar Waxwings in the ornamental berry tree at Roger’s Pond Park in Kennebunk Maine last week. I have already shared one. This is another 🙂 I love the pose and the color. The image did take some massaging, however. There was an out-of-focus twig running right up through it in the foreground, right at the tip of the birds beak. It did not destroy the image, but it was distracting. The image was originally processed in Snapseed. I was then able to remove the twig in Handy Photo which has a magic touch-retouch feature that is like PhotoShop’s healing brush, only better. I did some final clean up using a brush mask in Polarr. That is much more processing than I normally do on any image. 🙂

Sony RX10iii at 1200mm equivalent field of view (2x Clear Image Zoom). Processed as above. 1/800th @ ISO 100 @ f4. 

Cooper’s Hawk

Cooper’s Hawk, our house, Kennebunk Maine

We were gathered around the table for lunch on a cold rainy day last week, when Sarah (Sally), our daughter visiting for the holidays from Pittsburgh, glanced out the deck doors to see what all the Crow commotion in one of our big Maples was about…and there was a Cooper’s Hawk sitting below the Crows. It is rare for us to have a Hawk of any kind in the yard, and I think this is our first Coopers. I ran for the camera. When I opened the deck doors, the Crows all took off, but the Hawk sat there long enough for a few pics. Terrible light in the rain, but still…

Sony RX10iii at 1200mm equivalent field of view (2x Clear Image Zoom). Program Mode. 1/250th @ ISO 250 @ f4. Processed in Polarr on my Android tablet. 

Happiness!

Eastern Bluebird, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

It is the Bluebird of happiness, always! Not the Crow, or even the Cedar Waxwing, or the Great Blue Heron. Can you see it…the Great Blue Heron of happiness? No, it is the Bluebird of happiness. I know I am always happy to see one, or several as the case usually is. This specimen was part of a flock of a dozen or so feeding in and around Roger’s Pond Park in Kennebunk Maine early this week. It was there on the roof of the picnic shelter drinking melt water from the snow. 

Sony RX10iii at 1200mm equivalent field of view (2x Clear Image Zoom). 1/500th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Processed in Snapseed on my Android tablet. 

And may this truly be your Bluebird of Happiness for today!

Cedar Waxwing in winter…

Cedar Waxwing, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

Continuing my unintentional theme of birds in winter, here is one of several “keepers” of the Cedar Waxwings from my freezing session at Roger’s Pond Park on the Mousam River in Kennebunk, Maine. (You will undoubtedly see others. 🙂 There is lots to like about a Cedar Waxwing. They are somehow elegant birds, and I particularly like the new-crayon-bright red and yellow on the wings and tail. I have only a few shots where both is showing (or at least peaking out). 

Sony RX10iii at 600mm equivalent field of view. 1/800th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Cropped for scale and composition and processed in Snapseed on my Android tablet. 

Winter finch #2

Gold Finch, Roger’s Pond Park, Kennebunk Maine

Yesterday I shared a House Finch from this same tree at Roger’s Pond Park in Kennebunk Maine. There were Eastern Bluebirds, Cedar Waxwings, and Downy Woodpeckers around the tree as well…yet to come. 🙂

This an American Goldfinch in winter plumage. There is just enough yellow to stand out among the red berries. 

Sony RX10iii at 600mm equivalent field of view. Program Mode. 1/400th @ ISO 100 @ f4. Cropped for scale and composition, and processed in Snapseed on my Android tablet.