Monthly Archives: May 2015

Blue Jay Posing (with bokeh)

Blue Jay, Pearson Metropark, Oregon OH

On my last morning in Ohio for the Biggest Week in American Birding, I spent a few hours, before the drive to the airport, at Pearson Metropark right on the edge of Oregon, just a few miles from my hotel. The day before had been slow at Magee Marsh, and not much had changed at Pearson. There were a few warblers, Cardinals, Robins, and this very cooperative Blue Jay, posing on a branch long enough for a few shots. Still it was better being in the park than sitting in my hotel or waiting at the airport for the extra hours. 🙂

Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/200th @ ISO 400 @ f6.5. Processed in Lightrtoom. The interesting bokeh is from a chain-link fence a few yards behind the bird.

Blackpole views…

Blackpole Warbler, Magee Marsh, OH

Blackpole Warbler, Magee Marsh, OH

Sometimes, especially when migration hits when the leaves are already well out at Magee Marsh in Ohio, warbler photography is even more difficult than normal. My friend Rich was doing his first serious warbler captures this year and his constant refrain was “Why is there always a stick between me and the bird?” And, of course, there generally is, except when it is a thick bunch of leaves 🙂 Warblers sitting right out in plain sight, preferably in full sun, are simply very hard to come by, at Magee Marsh or anywhere else during spring migration. So when you see those killer shot of warblers, realize that they are the exception, not the rule.

This Blackpole warbler worked overhead, about 20 feet up, for 10 minutes or more, and I shot a lot of frames to get these four. Still, the panel shows off the Blackpole pretty well. Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/200th @ ISO 400 @ f6.5. Processed in Lightroom and assembled in Coolage on my Surface Pro 3 tablet.

 

Black and White peek-a-boo

Black and White Warbler, Magee Marsh OH

Woodpeckers unwittingly supply nest cavities for many other species. I never thought of the Black and White Warbler as one of them, but this B&W was obviously laying claim to a cavity along the Magee Marsh boardwalk. It sat with its head out like this for about 5 minutes then disappeared back into the cavity and did no reemerge for at least the next 15. I know, because we waited, hoping my friend Rich could also get a shot. (I tried to get him on the bird earlier, but another photographer stepped into the spot I made for Rich. 🙁

Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/100th @ ISO 800 @ f6.5. Processed in Topaz Denoise and Lightroom.

Yellow Warbler after bath…

Yellow Warbler, Magee Marsh OH

Yellow Warbler, Magee Marsh OH

This Yellow Warbler along the boardwalk at Magee Marsh during the Biggest Week in American Birding found some standing water for a bath, and then flew up into a bush for a thorough feather fluff and slick and some air drying. And of course I was there to catch it with my camera 🙂 There is no reasonable expectation of privacy on the boardwalk at Magee.

Nikon P900 at 1800mm equivalent field of view. 1/500th @ ISO 400 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom and assembled in Coolage on my Surface Pro 3 tablet.

Redstart. Happy Sunday!

American Redstart, Magee Marsh OH

American Redstart, Magee Marsh OH

The American Redstart is one of the more common warblers in North America…found most places…and nesting over a wide area of the continent. When they come through Magee Marsh in Ohio during the Biggest Week in American Birding they dominate the marshy forest by sheer numbers. They come in droves. It is easy to begin to think…Oh just another American Redstart…but every one is worth a look. They are perky, active, and fearless…often feeding within a few feet of birders on the boardwalk…and their bold colors, two shades of orange, jet black, with a white undertail, make them stand out in any foliage. These shots, as you see, were taken through openings in the foreground foliage, but the bird certainly stands out.

Nikon P900 at 1800mm equivalent field of view. 1/250th @ ISO 400 @ f6.3. Processed in Lightroom and assembled in Coolage Pro.

This is the last day of the Biggest Week in American Birding. I have been here 10 days. I am, but put it mildly, tired out! It has been, as always, a real treat to walk among the warblers and the birders on the Magee Marsh boardwalk…seemingly thousands of each. This week is as close to homecoming as birders get. It is the one time during the year that I can count on some actual face time with many of my social media birding friends. Someone said, “a gathering of the tribe” which implies a bit more blood ties that we actually experience…but it is certainly a convocation of the community…and a celebration of the birds that bring us together. Almost a religious experience, and certainly a spiritual one. Community is good…and the birding community is among the best. Birders are interesting, engaging, mostly very civil folk…people you can enjoy being around even if you are not a birder. And it comes out most strongly where they gather in numbers.

So, though I am tired out after 10 days, I am also uplifted by the community. This is good. Somebody this year coined the hashtag #warblerstock (which dates at least some of us rather obviously), but I do experience The Biggest Week as a kind of spiritual renewal each year. I go home with my eyes full of warblers, and heart full of good feelings…it is not to strong to say…”my heart full of love.” This is good. Happy Sunday!

Woodcock under the boardwalk

Woodcock, Magee Marsh OH

It rained yesterday morning, but my friend Rich and I got out to the Magee Marsh boardwalk (The Biggest Week in American Birding) late in the day, after 5PM. There were still lots of birds feeding and moving…warblers at eye-level…Magee at its best. We walked right past this Woodcock probing the mud along the edge of the channel under the east end of the boardwalk. A more observant birder behind us pointed it out and we spent 10 minutes watching it work along the edge of the water, within feet of the photographers and birders on the boardwalk above it.

Nikon P900 at 550mm equivalent field of view. 1/60th @ ISO 450 @ f5. Procesed in Lightroom.

Blackburnian!

Blackburnian Warbler, Magee Marsh OH

I have yet to get my “killer” Blackburnian Warbler shot…but this is good enough to be going on with. 🙂 The Blackburnian is on my short list of favorite warblers, and may well be (depending on the day and my mood) number one! And, though it is probably an accident, the name of this warbler is one of the most apt bird names. The warbler is black (and white) and yet it burns…that orange throat is alike a live coal in any light. Watching one flit among the leaves, actively feeding, 30 feet above your head is like watching a spark dance…only a spark with intelligence and grace…full of intense intent. Awesome in the literal sense of the word. The Blackburnian, small as it is, inspires awe.

Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/500th @ ISO 320 @ f6.5. Processed and cropped slightly for composition in Lightroom.

Oriole in Redbuds

Baltimore Oriole in a Redbud tree, Black Swamp Bird Observatory, Oak Harbor OH

I attempted to catch this Baltimore Oriole in the Redbud tree by the door of the Black Swamp Bird Observatory, where I am working the Biggest Week in American Birding, for two days. It kept coming back, but I was across the parking lot and never had my camera ready when it perched there. The first day the tree was beautifully blossomed out…the second day, after a supercell thunderstorm, it was not looking as good, and the light was not at its best, but the contrast between the orange orange of the Oriole and the pink of the blossoms was still worth catching.

Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/500th @ ISO 400 @ f6.5. Processed in Topaz Denoise and Lightroom. Cropped for composition.

Hidden in Plain Sight

Eastern Screech Owl. Magee Marsh OH

This is a grey morph Eastern Screech Owl. They also come in red morphs, and the two colors are scattered randomly in the population where they overlap. This owl’s mate is a red. The screech owl is about as well camouflaged as any bird. There were birders on the boardwalk at Magee Marsh during the Biggest Week in American birding while I was photographing the owl who, despite my best efforts, the best efforts of many other helpful birders, to point the bird out, never did see it either with naked eye or binoculars. And this is about as exposed as it can get. Generally it is partially obscured by leaves. I say generally, because this owl has frequented the little angle of woodland where the boardwalk branches off to form the back loop for at least 3 years, and it was just up the boardwalk from there for several years before that. It is a faithful owl, if difficult to see 🙂

Nikon P900 at 2000mm equivalent field of view. 1/80th @ ISO 800 @ f6.5. Processed in Topaz Denoise and Lighroom. Cropped slightly for composition.

 

Chestnut!

Chestnut-sided Warbler, Magee Marsh, OH

Yesterday I named my 4 favorite Warblers, and my memory is such, and so many warblers vie for honor in that list, that if I named them again right now without looking back at yesterday’s post, I might get at least one wrong…or, not “wrong” exactly…it would just be that another warbler might be ascendant at that moment. American Redstart? Black and White? Prothonotary? You see the problem? Just too many great warblers to pick from. The Chestnut-sided, though among the most common warblers in North America, would likely make the list every day. It is such a vivid warbler, and so present…feeding just above eye level, at least during migration…and, here at Magee Marsh and the Biggest Week in American Birding, often within 10 feet of eager birders. I could not even use the full reach of the zoom on my camera for this specimen. It bounced almost within arms reach, oblivious to the half dozen photographers blasting away at it. And that is the wonder of Magee Marsh during migration. 🙂

Nikon P900 at about 1600mm equivalent. 1/320th @ ISO 400 @ f6.3. Processed in Topaz Denoise and Lightroom. Full frame…uncropped.