WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 2024   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES   

BACKYARD BIRDING
As July edges toward August, our yards should be flourishing and robust with new growth and an abundance of flowers. It’s also time to be alert for new birds arriving in your yard as many birds are dispersing from nesting territories to the north, including a new cohort of recent fledglings making their first movements south. What birds are you expecting? Hummingbirds, finches, orioles, thrushes, native sparrows, towhees, bluebirds, cardinals? With dispersing birds in mind, it’s a good time to add a few key plants that can attract some new and returning birds.
BIRDING NEWS
The Hawk Migration Association of North America (HMANA) is celebrating 50 years of raptor research and migration monitoring by calling on all birders interested in birds of prey, hawkwatchers, and raptor biologists to join together November 7th to 10th in Duluth, Minnesota. Join in celebrating the past 50 years – the people, the places, and the raptors – while looking to the future of the next 50 years. Join the activities in person or virtually for this momentous conference and anniversary celebration that includes programs, featured speakers, and field trips.
The 2024 Songbird Art Contest is now open and accepting entries! The contest is Free to enter and open to young people aged from kindergarten through 12th grade. Entries will be accepted today through November 30th. This year’s list of 5 bird species that participants will choose from to illustrate in their artwork will include the American Goldfinch, Scarlet Tanager, Cerulean Warbler, Brown-headed Nuthatch, and Scissor-tailed Flycatcher – all exciting birds to illustrate. Along with their art, students in 4th grade and older will also provide a short creative writing piece.
EDITOR AFIELD
New fledglings and hatchlings continue to dominate the excitement of mid-summer, with new fledglings including Western Kingbirds, more Eastern Kingbirds, and new hatchlings that included Virginia Rails, Red-necked Grebes, Wild Turkeys, Hooded Mergansers, and Ruddy Ducks with a variety of new duck broods appearing every day. At the same time, there is an obvious initial influx of shorebirds that are arriving – some species by the hundreds, including Long-billed Dowitchers, Stilt Sandpipers, and Wilson’s Phalaropes with lesser numbers of yellowlegs and other sandpipers.

GEAR
Already very affordable, the Vortex Diamondback HD 8x42 Binoculars are on sale now! The Vortex Diamondbacks feature improved phase-coated BaK-4 prisms and fully multi-coated lenses that make your views of birds brighter and sharper with better color fidelity. The wide field of view is 393 feet at 1,000 yards, which is a plus for birders, and the close focus distance is just 5 feet – a bonus when viewing birds at your feeders or in your yard. The HD 8x42 weighs only 22 ounces thanks to a light-weight but strong magnesium alloy chassis that is rubber armor-coated to protect it and provide a sturdy grip.
PRODUCTS
Are pesky bugs and biting mosquitos crimping your birding style? It’s that time of the year, but you can beat those bugs with shirts, pants, socks, and other insect repelling clothes available from REI and made by ExOfficio and Royal Robbins. Look into stylish outdoor activewear that birds appreciate, like the BugsAway Brisa Woven Long-Sleeve Shirt, available in 4 colors, and the Bug Barrier Traveler Zip N’ Go Convertible Pants that you can easily turn into shorts, then back to pants. With sale prices in effect, it’s a great time to be a bug-free birder.
On sale now, the Rustic Pedestal Bird Bath with fleur-de-lis accents and a rustic aged finish will add color, style, and birds to your garden, yard, or feeding station. A hollow chamber in the pedestal can be filled with sand, water, or gravel to add weight and stability to the bird bath, and there are 3 ground stakes that can also be used to anchor the base to the ground. Made with weather-resistant and UV-resistant polyresin, the basin is 20 inches wide and it stands 28 inches tall. Remember, fresh water attracts a greater diversity of birds than any foods you can offer.
RARE BIRDS
Lightning striked twice last week at a pond near Gila Bend, Arizona, where a First State Record Curlew Sandpiper – and – a Third State Record Royal Tern were documented within a couple days of each other. Three other First State Records were established, including an American Flamingo in Rhode Island, a Bridled Tern in New Hampshire – and a Ferruginous Hawk in Maine, where birders also found a Third State Record Tropical Kingbird. A photograph of the Tropical Kingbird prompted a welcomed insight from David Sibley, who pointed out that the kingbird appears to be a South American subspecies.
 

BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY

July has proven to be an especially active birding period that is now rivaling spring migration for the variety and abundance of birds encountered. It’s also a period of overlapping bird biology, with some birds completing their nesting season with some fledglings already on their own, mixed with birds with newly hatched broods, all while some birds are beginning to arrive from Arctic and boreal forest nesting areas. It’s been exciting, even though I’m well versed in what to expect in this region of the Northern Great Plains.

The diversity of birds on hand, along with the abundance of birds in the area, are providing a variety of bird photo opportunities, pretty much day by day. And with that in mind, I wanted to share a variety of bird photos that I’ve taken since our last issue a week ago. I’ve taken photos of many more birds than I’m sharing here, but picked out some of what I consider a good cross-section of species that I’ve managed to get good quality images of in the field. It’s truly an exciting time of the year for birders and I hope you are giving your camera a good workout this summer!

One of many surprise encounters last week, a Red-necked Grebe with 3 fledgling-aged young was photographed as the evening light was dimming. It created a bit of a balancing act to get as broad an area in focus to keep all the grebes’ features sharp, while preserving an adequate shutter speed to stop any motion (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/640 shutter speed, 800 ISO).
Newly fledged Western Kingbirds are representative of many new fledglings appearing during the past week in this region. With such attractive photo subjects on hand, still perching side by side after leaving the nest, it’s fairly easy to get some quality images as long as you are positioned with sunlight coming from behind you. In the second image, the fledgling trio is reacting to the appearance of an adult with insect food (450mm zoom lens, f-13 aperture, 1/800 shutter speed and 500mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed at 800 ISO.)
It’s always hard to get a photo with all the ducklings in a brood looking into the sunlight along with the female, but with practice you learn to watch when the sunlight brightens the faces of the ducks. Have you identified the species of this brood yet? It’s a Redhead hen with a brood of 6 ducklings (550mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/1000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).
Adding some action and emotion to this mixed selection of photos, an intensely defensive Western Grebe with a partly hidden hatchling on her back provides the results of a fast-action documentary photo as she backs away from an aggressive Westie at a foraging location. The super-fast shutter speed stopped the action to provide a dramatic image that shows action that passed in a split second. It’s important to be ready for the next outburst of action that may take place (600mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed, 800 ISO).
With the re-appearance of post-nesting Franklin’s Gulls in the area, individual gulls show varied levels of molting as well as different plumages that reveal the age of younger birds. In this photograph a black-headed adult shows the first signs of molting feathers, while the other Franklin’s Gull has its yearling, first summer plumage (500mm zoom lens, f-10 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed, 800 ISO.)
The most recent of 11 duck species to appear with a brood of ducklings was a Hooded Merganser, a cavity nesting duck that is relatively rare in the open plains region during the nesting season. If you can magnify the bill of the adult female, you can see how specialized its thin bill is, which is adapted for catching small fish (600mm zoom lens, f-9 aperture, 1/1600 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Article and Photographs by Paul Konrad

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

 
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