Ring-necked Pheasant on display (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/4000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).
Sometimes, one photograph stands out among the many, or is it one bird? Or is it the spark of life exuding from a given bird. In this case it was a fantastically colored male Ring-necked Pheasant, a bird that made me look anew at this rather common bird in my neck of the continent. The varied colors shimmered in the sunlight of late afternoon when the gaudy male was displaying for 5 females, and I was hoping to not only photograph it in this stunning strut, but also when it crowed loudly, breaking the silence of the open fields and blue sky.
The grand rooster crowed 2 minutes earlier with his back toward me while standing in the midst of obstructing grasses. So, as I took this photograph and another, I was tensely poised to document this pumped-up bird in this open space as it miraculously exploded into another crowing sequence – but that didn’t happen. He merely continued his calculated strutting walk to stand in the midst of the 5 females that didn’t seem to care that he was present or not as they foraged low on the edge of a stubble field.
Walking among his prized ladies this grand duke of pheasants did crow a number of times, but never with the normal wing flapping, tail spreading display. He merely raised his neck up and forward and hollered out his vital crowing song; and I can’t remember ever seeing a pheasant crow without the crowing display involved – interesting.
At that point, the pheasants were moving ever-farther into the field, and the light began to dim, so I appreciated the photographs I had the pleasure to record and drove into the setting sun. Another day, someday, someday soon I hope, a grand cock pheasant will delight me again with the chance to photograph its bold crowing display, which is as electric as a lightning bolt and as colorful as a male Ring-necked Pheasant in its prime.
Article and Photograph by Paul Konrad
Share your bird photos and birding experiences at editorstbw2@gmail.com