WEDNESDAY, MAY 28, 2025   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES   

BIRDING NEWS
Birders can enjoy a variety of Birding Festivals throughout June, with a number of them crossing over from the shared weekend of May 31 to June 1st. Event locations during June pivoted northward to follow the later songbird migration period as birds approach the vast boreal forest where many warblers and other species nest. Loons are another June species of interest and the focus on these iconic birds of northern lakes country is apparent. We hope you have an opportunity to attend one of the many birding festivals that take place through the dedicated work of many people to celebrate the birds of June.
Birders and researchers are invited to attend meetings of the Western Field Ornithologists (WFO), the Washington Ornithological Society, and the Colorado Field Ornithologists – all being held the weekend of June 5th to 8th. The WFO and Washington Ornithological Society are teaming up for the 2025 Annual Conference in Yakima, Washington this year. Each year Western Field Ornithologists holds a multi-day conference with the presentation of scientific papers, field trips, workshops, panels, a keynote address, the annual membership meeting, and other events.
Last week, this article was accidentally omitted from the email subscriber’s edition, but was available on our website. As a result, we reprint it here for everyone: It’s an exciting time of the year for anyone who appreciates the spring migration of warblers and other songbirds during May. When you think of the best warbler migration you have witnessed, keep the date May 28th in mind. During that now famous day, 108 species of birds were sighted at the Tadoussac Bird Observatory in southeast Quebec, including unheard of numbers of birds, including an estimated 721,620 warblers! High estimates of individual species included 144,300 Bay-breasted Warblers, 108,200 Magnolia Warblers, 108,200 Cape May Warblers, 50,500 American Redstarts, 28,900 Blackburnian Warblers, 14,400 Canada Warblers, and more.
EDITOR AFIELD
After 5 days away from the warbler fallout of May 17th (the days I spent in northeast Portugal or en transit to and from Europe), would you believe I checked all my local birding hotspots before I went home? After being away 5 days, a lot of things could change, and they did, including finding a new species and documenting more “rare bird” sightings. My first stop was my warbler hotspot at Melody’s Grove and I was almost surprised that The Grove was very active, but especially glad to arrive in the midst of a songbird fallout last Friday, May 23rd.

EDITOR AFIELD IN EUROPE
A new nation of birds, a different continent and hemisphere, and an international group of birders to spend time with during primo weather: Portugal was an exciting destination! With the potential of finding a variety of exciting birds in varied habitats from the Atlantic Ocean to the beach, the sand dunes, suburban habitats (some overgrown), and a broad river estuary. Some avian highlights included Western Yellow Wagtails, Sardinian Warblers, European Stonechats, a Black-tailed Godwit, and a Eurasian Hoopoe; with longtime favorites like Eurasian Jays, White Wagtails, and Eurasian Blackbirds (a species of thrush) on hand too.
GEAR
Providing the only 9-power magnification binoculars that we are aware of, Pentax’s SD 9x42 Binoculars provide fully multi-coated lenses with anti-reflection properties that maximize light transmission through the entire optical path. The roof prisms are phase-corrected to ensure bright, high-contrast views of birds showing natural colors, even in low light. The increased 9x magnification still provides a field of view of 321 feet at 1,000 yards while the armor-covered housing is waterproof as well as nitrogen-filled and O-ring sealed for fogproof performance.
PRODUCTS
Scheels has everything birders may be looking for – optics, outdoor gear, seasonal clothing, comfortable footwear, and feeders too. Offering a wide variety of quality binoculars and spotting scopes with great prices, Scheels has stylish, comfortable walking shoes and hiking boots, clothing from T-shirts to flannels, pullovers, rain gear, and more. Outdoor clothing is definitely an important part of Scheels appeal for birders, and you can stop in to one of the convenient Scheels stores or get online chat assistance on Scheels’ online store.
For the first time ever, you can literally review information about All the Birds of the World together in a single, easy-to-use, fully-illustrated volume! Created for a broad audience ranging from novice birders to expert ornithologists and anyone interested in the spectacular diversity of birds, this fascinating book is filled with birds for everyone to discover. With 20,865 illustrations that show the varied plumage of each sex and age, along with many morphs and distinctive subspecies, this comprehensive volume covers all of the more than 11,100 species of birds recognized worldwide, with distribution maps provided for each species.
RARE BIRDS
During a busy 2-week period there were 2 impressive Fourth North American Records established by birders, a Southern Lapwing in Tennessee, and a Great Crested Tern on the Big Island in Hawaii. Both sightings also established the Fourth Record in the respective state. American birders also documented 5 First State Records including a Streaked Shearwater offshore from New Jersey, a Great Kiskadee and a Roseate Tern in Alabama, a Virginia’s Warbler in Ohio, and a Tundra Bean Goose in Wyoming – and there were many more exciting rare birds reported!
 

BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY

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

BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY

An American Goldfinch on display (550mm zoom lens, f-6 aperture, 1/200 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

So often when photographing birds we want to get as close as possible, to take photos that show as much detail in a bird as we can and minimize the surrounding elements in a given photo. But sometimes we just can’t get any closer, and that’s when it’s worthwhile to get the most out of the situation and the bird before us, and that’s what happened when I spied a spritely colored American Goldfinch perched outside my office window. I reached for my camera, and zeroed in on the bird, magnifying it as much as possible while minimizing its surroundings.

After taking the first couple photos, the goldfinch was abiding enough to stay in its rather attractive position on the edge of an elm branch with brand new leaves stretching to one side. That’s when I realized there was a much better composition option before me. In response I reduced the magnification on my zoom lens to expand the view to the side of the goldfinch that included the entire leaf cluster. By using an f-6 aperture, I narrowed the area in focus so the background beyond the bird, branch, and leaves was blurred into pleasant shades of spring green. This not only eliminated the busy background, but it helped to emphasize the bird and leaves as a singular entity in the expanded image.

I always like to position the bird in the photo frame to one side, rather than centering the bird; and in this case it really adds a creative touch to the image. Now the photograph resembles more of an artwork, similar to what you might see in a Robert Bateman painting. This is an example of how we should look for other ways to compose a photograph of a bird beyond centering it, beyond our first impression. It’s something to keep in mind as you photograph a bird that provides a little extra time for you to think twice and consider some more creative photo composition options.

Article and Photograph by Paul Konrad

Share your bird photos and birding experiences at editorstbw2@gmail.com

Eared Grebe on display in the land of sky blue water (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

When I focused on a resting Eared Grebe as it floated peacefully on glassy water reflecting a beautiful morning blue sky, there was not the slightest ripple on the water. I photographed, then waited, and in time the grebe raised its head and stretched its beak open as if to yawn, creating the slightest murmur of a ripple on the water, which may have added a bit of depth to the blue surface. That’s when I framed the grebe in the left side of the image with the tranquil water spread out before the waterbird.

To add a bit more length to the image, when I viewed it on my computer screen, I decided to crop a bit of the top and bottom out of the image, which I think added just the right amount of character to the scene. In the resulting photograph the water almost overpowers the grebe, but as always, the bird takes center stage, even when it is positioned far to the left side of the image. Try to inject more art into some images as you compose your bird photographs; for me, it seemed to be the surrounding colors that helped to inspire a little different look to some of the new photographs I’ve been taking the past couple days, and I wanted to pass along that insight into bird photography – Good Luck.

Article and Photograph by Paul Konrad

Share your bird photos and birding experiences at editorstbw2@gmail.com

 
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