Monthly Archives: July 2022

Greater Ani

Greater Ani: Panama Canal, Gamboa, Panama, July 2022 — Another new bird for me on this trip to Panama, the Greater Ani is a mostly South American bird who’s range reaches just to the Canal in Panama. This is one big ani! And, in good light, it has an interesting blue sheen to the body and wings. In Panama its range overlaps with both Smooth-billed and Grove-billed Ani, but it seems to be more closely associated with slow moving water…shallow lakes and rivers. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. ISO 640 @ f4 @ 1/500th.

Bonus: Snowberry Clearwing Moth

Snowberry Clearwing Moth: Kennebunk, Maine, USA, July 2022 — As I mentioned in yesterday’s Day Poem…when I went out for my eTrike ride the other day I was dumping my “old’ water from my water bottle in the hanging plants out front when I saw this Snowberry Clearwing Moth working the blooms. We have two possible Clearwings here in Southern Maine…the Snowberry and the Hummingbird…and I always have to look them up to refresh my memory after seeing one. Maybe one of those times the differences will stick in my head. (You can google it.) Both look, when working flowers, like tiny hummingbirds. Though references say the Hummingbird Clearwing is the more common of the two, I have definitely seen more Snowberries. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications and multi-fame noise reduction (definitely not needed in this situation…but the camera was still in that mode when I grabbed it for the Clearwing…and by the time I got it to the correct mode…the moth was gone 🙂 Nominal exposure ISO 200 @ f4 @ 1/500th.

Limpkin!

Limpkin: Panama Canal, Gamboa, Pamana, July 2022 (near Canopy Tower) — From the numbers of Limpkins and Snail Kites seen along the Panama Canal, you would suspect that the waters are rich in Apple Snails…and indeed they are. The Limpkin is a tropical bird, common from the Amazon basin to Florida, wherever there are significant concentrations of Apple Snails…and it’s beak is adapted specifically to extract snails from their shells. It is the only member of its family…most closely related to rails and cranes. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. ISO 640 @ f4 @ 1/500th.

Unexpected birds on the Canal: Magnificent Frigatebird and Brown Booby

Magnificent Frigatebird and Brown Booby: Panama Canal, Gamboa, Panama, July 2022 — Frigatebirds are common in the air over the Pacific coast of Panama but I did not expect to see them sitting on a buoy in the middle of the Canal. And even our guide did not expect to see the Brown Booby sitting with them. 🙂 That is part of the fun of birding of course…expecting the unexpected. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. Frigatebird ISO 200 @ f4 @ 1/500th, Booby ISO 100 @ f4 @ 1/800th.

White-fringed Bog Orchid: Saco Heath

White-fringed Bog Orchid: Saco Heath, Saco, Maine, USA — We are taking a break from my coverage of the Panama trip for today’s photos. My friend Stef and I spent a morning at Saco Heath…a remnant raised (or domed) peat bog in Saco, Maine…the most southern such bog in Maine. We were too late in the season for most of the bog specialties…we only found one Pitcher Plant…but we did find a small stand of White-fringed Bog Orchid at the far edge of the last hummock before the Atlantic White Cedar Island. A beautiful plant that, despite its common name, also grows wild in wet meadows and forests…though I have never seen it anywhere but in a bog in Maine. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. These are actually two identical frames. The close up is just heavily cropped to show the flower detail, and then expanded in Pixelmator using their Machine Learning tool, for pixel count. ISO 100 @ f7.1 @ 1/1000th. Minus .7EV exposure compensation to hold detail in the whites.

Striated Heron

Striated Heron: Panama Canal, Gamboa, Panama (near Canopy Tower), July 2022 — I might have said this before, but I was surprised by the number of new birds I saw in Panama this trip. I have birded in Panama twice before, in Bocas del Toro both times, and I birded in extreme southern Costa Rica last December, but still there are a lot of birds I either missed, or that reach their northern limits in area of the Canal Zone in Panama. Turns out the Striated Heron is found pretty much all around the world in the tropics on either side of the equator, ranging further south in South American and Africa, and further north in Pacific Asia. It used to be considered the same species as the Green Heron, and if you lump the ranges of both birds that would extend the range to all of North America and Europe. Truly a bird found on every continent. I actually saw this same bird, according to some authorities, on the Galapagos, where it is called the Galapagos Heron. Those who still consider this heron to be a single species, wherever it is found, still call it the Green-backed Heron, which, if your birding memory goes back beyond the 1990s, is what we used to call the Green Heron when we saw one in North America. 🙂 Interestingly, on the Canal we saw both Green Herons and Striated Herons. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. ISO 500 @ f4 @ 1/500th.

Black-bellied Whistling Duck

Black-bellied Whistling Duck: Panama Canal, Gamboa, Panama, July 2022 — There were large flocks of Black-bellied Whistling Ducks on the Canal. We see them, of course, in South Texas, so they are not new to me, but they are certainly a handsome bird, and it was my first sighting from a small boat, and certainly my closest approach. Sony Rx10iv at 586mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. ISO 400 @ f4 @ 1/500th.

Wattled Jacana

Wattled Jacana: Panama Canal, Gamboa, Panama (near Canopy Tower), July 2022 — The Wattled Jacana is primarily a South American bird, with a range east of the Andes, but it reaches its northern limits in Panama. There are apparently two forms, not separated by location, but rather by “population”. This is the black-backed variety. There is also a chestnut-backed variety that looks more like a Northern Jacana. Both have the distinctive red “wattle” above the yellow beak, and the yellow underside of the wings…as well as the bright yellow bone spur or spike at the angle of the wing. The theory is that the spike is used for defense. You can see the spike in the photo with the wings extended. We saw Jacanas everywhere from our small boat on the Panama Canal, walking on the water plants in the shallows. We were able to drift up quite close. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. ISO 1000 and 640 @ f4 @ 1/500th.

Green Heron on the Panama Canal

Green Heron: Panama Canal near Canopy Tower, Gamboa, Panama — On my first full day at the Canopy Lodge, the morning activity was a boat ride on the Panama Canal, which, I will admit, did not sound very exciting to me when I first heard it. I had totally the wrong mental image of the canal. I was thinking a narrow cut through the landscape, something like the canals of Europe, or the Erie Canal, which was the closest canal to me growing up. The Panama Canal is nothing like. The Panama Canal is mostly lakes…larger bodies of water with deep channels for the ships, and lots of little bays and islands and small streams coming in from the sides that you can poke a small boat with an outboard up to explore. It is not contained by concrete (except a little at the locks). And the boat ride was one of the best outings of my time at Canopy Tower. We saw a lot of birds, and both Howler and White-faced Capuchin monkeys, most very close to the boat. We saw so many Green Herons, both adult and juvenile, that I eventually stopped taking photos of them. They were everywhere! Especially the juveniles. Sony Rx10iv at 600mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos.

Woolly Possum

Woolly Possum: Canopy Tower, Panama, July 2022 — My first night at the Canopy Tower, the guide asked if I would like to go out on a night drive after supper…and of course I said “:sure”. We boarded the Birdmobile, sitting the open back of the pick-up on benches, and headed down the Semaphore Hill road, shining big led spotlights into the trees overhead and on either side, looking for the glow of eyes looking back. Alex (our guide for the evening) spotted this Woolly Possum high in the canopy. The Sony’s multi-frame noise reduction works well with hand held lights and between Alex’s spot and my little, but very bright, tactical light, I managed a decent shot. Sony Rx10iv at 584mm equivalent. Program mode with my custom birds and wildlife modifications and multi-frame noise reduction. Processed in Pixelmator Photo and Apple Photos. Equivalent ISO 6400 @ f4 @ 1/125.