WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2025   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES   

BACKYARD BIRDING
It’s berry time in many parts of the continent, and often ripening berries coincide nicely with early migration, fall migration, and even extending into winter if the berry crop isn’t consumed by then. Even as we write this, our chokecherries are being assaulted by a band of marauding American Robins, but that’s a good thing. In fact, that’s just what the chokecherries are for – robins, waxwings, bluebirds, grosbeaks, northern thrushes, and any other birds that benefit from this seasonal food source that is so important during migration stopovers.
BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY
As I wrote a couple weeks ago: “Rarely are we able to take a perfect photograph of a bird, even in the best of conditions.” Last week, I had a reminder of that very fact. A Bald Eagle I have come to know a bit over this summer was perched on the edge of Charo Marsh close to the road I was following. I spied the eagle from quite a distance away, and also saw a large truck raising a plume of dust as it approached the eagle at considerable speed. Even so, the eagle didn’t seem to flinch and I waited a moment for the truck to pass by me before making my next move.
BIRDING NEWS
Bottomland forests along the Upper Mississippi River provide important resources for a variety of nesting, migrating, and wintering bird species throughout the year. While these forests are some of the largest intact woodlands in the region, managing these forests for the future and for the benefit of associated wildlife is crucial to keeping this ecosystem productive for birds and people. Ongoing bird community surveys help us to understand habitat associations that inform and influence habitat management in the Upper Mississippi River Valley.
EDITOR AFIELD
Merlins made a surprising appearance in the area last week, with the first perched 13 miles south of my office last Tuesday evening. Merlin number 2 surprised me 10 miles northwest after I checked on the Burrowing Owl site – still no sign of the owls – but the mini-falcon made up for that in a big way. I drove by the spot just 15 minutes before, but on my return, there she was, a young tan-colored Merlin that permitted me to park near its perch and photograph at will. Like the Prairie Falcon a couple weeks before, the Merlin did little more than turn its head, but that was enough to excite the heck outta me as I composed portrait photos in the 8pm sunlight.

GEAR
Providing the finest binocular performance for birders among Nikon’s famous Monarch series, the Nikon Monarch HG 8x42 Binoculars provide an impressive 92 percent light transmission through fully multi-coated ED (Extra-low Dispersion) lenses for contrast-rich, high-resolution images with rich natural colors. Nikon’s Field Flattener Lens System also assures sharp, clear images to the edges of your binocular view. And providing the especially wide field of view of 435 feet at 1,000 yards is one of many features that make the Monarch HG ideal for birders.
PRODUCTS 1
A computer can do more than just store and archive your bird photographs when you add a photo editing program that allows you to edit, modify, and optimize photos you take. On sale now, PaintShop Pro provides easy to use, simple photo editing options to improve your best photographs ranging from cropping excess background to sharpening images and brightening dull colors. Known for its simplicity, quality, and low cost, PaintShop Pro photo editing software provides high-quality results, it’s quick and easy to use, and it’s on sale now at 15 percent savings on an already low price.
PRODUCTS 2
The Kingsyard Triple Feeder features 3 compartments that allow you to feed 3 different types of seeds in feeder with an attractive farmhouse design that comes in your choice of 4 colors that’s durable and weatherproof for long-lasting use. The one-piece lid lifts off for easy filling and cleaning, and it protects the seeds. A metal tray surrounds the bottom of the entire feeder to provide birds with easy and expansive access to seeds and perching locations, and the tray has built-in drain holes to help keep seeds fresh and dry.
RARE BIRDS
Sandpipers of all sizes dominate this week’s rare bird sightings, including a First State Record Little Stint at Heinz National Wildlife Refuge in Philadelphia. Birders also photographed a Red-necked Stint photographed on Kure Atoll in the Northwest Hawaiian Islands. A Provincial Record Spotted Redshank photographed by wary birders in in Ontario is one of fewer than 10 records for the province, but the first in more than 20 years. Beyond these exciting shorebird sightings, birders documented a second Cattle Tyrant in Galveston, Texas, which also established the Second North American Record!
 

BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY

Driving north along my local Raptor Route, I was nearing the Ferruginous Hawk nest that now stood abandoned; but looking in that direction a sudden flash of huge black wings startled me for the moment as what turned out to be a recently fledged Bald Eagle took flight! Just outside my window, the big raptor elevated into view on labored wingbeats as it pumped its broad black wings to rise from the ground toward the front of my auto, passing before me as I immediately took my foot off the gas pedal and coasted forward. The big eagle was out of sight until then, hidden behind a veil of tall cattails, but now in full view I imagined the young eagle might not fly far – perhaps just to the hay bales lined up on the opposite side of the road. That brought the big eagle into full sunlight, where its plumage changed from black to brown as it landed.

A surprise opportunity to encounter and photograph an especially large, recently fledged Bald Eagle provided some high-quality images that could be cropped to include the whole bird, and to create head-and shoulder portrait photos (all photos: 600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/1000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

What luck to have the eagle land so close in remarkable late afternoon sunlight! I have only been this close to such a recently fledged Bald Eagle once before, so I knew this was a great opportunity to get a couple impressive photographs, perhaps a nice series of images. The young eagle was aware of my auto, but not concerned, and after getting its bearings with its back to me, it turned to provide a side view, showing that it was obviously a young female considering its especially large size along with the size of its extended feet. After a couple moments, the eagle became a bit mobile, partly opening its wings and walking or hopping along the line of bales in a rather comical way.

The above photo was cropped to create the first portrait of the young eagle, but it is a pleasing full-sized photo itself. The late afternoon- early evening sunlight provided nice highlights to show even slight variations in feather coloring.

I photographed the action, but with its wings partly shading the face of the eagle, the resulting photos were poor at best. It was fun to see the eagle hustle along nonetheless. Positioned at the end of the hay bales now, the eagle paused for a while, providing some nice opportunities to photograph the bird in perfect sunlight that showed no shadows while highlighting the varied coloration of the raptor’s plumage, feather by feather. We might imagine that a newly fledged Bald Eagle’s plumage should be pretty uniformly colored, but many exposed feathers become a bit faded during the extended period young eagles spend in the open nest and during the post-fledging period in the mid-summer sunlight.

Taken a moment later, this portrait really shows details of the color and shapes of individual feathers when the eagle raised the feathers on its crown to provide a distinctive look.

An hour later, excited by the quality of the photos I was able to take of the young Bald Eagle, I began to review the photographs on my computer screen, picking out favorites, reliving the photo period shared with the recently fledged Bald Eagle. While my photo picks provided some nice head-to-toe portraits, I could see some excellent potential for head-and-shoulders portraits too. The sharp eyes and beak, along with the sharp outline of individual feathers really emphasized the chance to create some impressive images by cropping a couple of the original photographs, as indicated by the first, third, and fourth images that illustrate this feature article.

Before the big eagle repositioned along the top of the bales, this was the initial pose of the recently fledged female Bald Eagle, showing the pattern of its upper back plumage and the verdant green background vegetation.

I was aware of only 1 active Bald Eagle nest in Logan County this year, which was located just a mile away from the young eagle’s position when I photographed it. I was unable to see the nest after the big cottonwood where the nest was build produced a thick cover of leaves, but I did see an adult Bald Eagle during one of my visits to the Ferruginous Hawk nest site, so I imagined the eagles were raising at least 1 nestling. Friday’s observation of the recent fledgling within sight of the nesting tree provided an indication of the success of the adult nesting pair, as well as a memorable photo opportunity with a super-raptor close, a bird as big as any North American bird of prey gets. What luck, what fun, what fine photos too.

Article and Photographs by Paul Konrad

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