WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 2026   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES

BACKYARD BIRDING

Summer is a good time to try to specialize on attracting birds that may not be around past September. Starting with keeping fresh water in one or more birdbaths in your yard, it's nice to provide an all-inclusive feeding station that welcomes a variety of birds, and summer is the best time to emphasize certain foods as the nesting season winds down and fledglings become more a part of the neighborhood mix. We tend to focus on such seasonal species as orioles and hummingbirds, as well as goldfinches, woodpeckers, and the occasional nuthatch; but this year robins have become the dominant birds – utilizing grape jelly even more than orioles – as are House Finches. 

BIRDING NEWS 1

Since 2001 the Adirondack Center for Loon Conservation (ACLC) has conducted the New York Annual Loon Census on the third Saturday of the July, which is July 18th this year. Although it takes volunteers just 1 hour to conduct the survey, from 8 to 9am, the information provided is adds appreciably to the quarter-century of information already collected at lakes across the state of New York. As environmental sentinels, Common Loons that nest at freshwater lakes provide insights into the health of lake ecosystems.

BIRDING NEWS 2

Visit Alabama's storied and historic Black Belt region to attend the Black Belt Birding Festival, scheduled for July 31 to August 2nd. Organized and conducted by Alabama Audubon, this region is a premier destination for birding in the Southeast that features open prairie grasslands adjacent to forests and bottomland swamps. These varied habitats provide festival attendees a variety of opportunities to observe many exciting species of birds in pristine settings. As the Southeast's largest prairie ecosystem, it is the only place you can find Wood Storks and Swallow-tailed Kites along with Painted Buntings, Dickcissels, and Scissor-tailed Flycatchers.

EDITOR AFIELD

Last Wednesday I set sail for my hometown, Bismarck, a favorite birding drive that can take many twists and turns as I search for birds and other wildlife, plus photo opportunities. As often happens, the 2-hour drive turned into a 5½-hour cruise that was rich in birds and even warranted an additional 1-hour extension. Although the birds I observed were interesting, as always, I was hoping to find a premium photo opportunity as I meandered across the Missouri Coteau's hilly grasslands mixed with abundant wetlands and ag fields. I checked for everything from Burrowing Owls and Bobolinks to sandpipers and duck broods on the way to such outstanding hotspots as McKenzie Slough and Long Lake National Wildlife Refuge. 

GEAR

Bushnell's Engage EDX 8x42 Binoculars are built for birders who demand the best – ED Prime glass, dielectric prism coatings, and phase-corrected optics that deliver exceptional resolution and color accuracy, even in challenging light conditions. A lightweight magnesium chassis provides balance for longer birding sessions, while Bushnell's exclusive EXO Barrier repels water and dust to keep lenses clean. Every moment's sighting, ranging from a warbler at sunrise to a raptor on the horizon, is produced in remarkable clarity and color when using an Engage EDX 8x42 Binocular – your window to the wild. 

PRODUCTS 1

Offering a dramatic and captivating window into a once-in-a-lifetime experience, The Last Cold Place details Naira de Gracia’s time living and working in a remote outpost in Antarctica alongside penguins, seals, and a small crew of fellow field workers. In one of the most inhospitable environments in the world (for people anyway), Naira follows a generation of Chinstrap Penguins from the return of the adult pairs to an ocean shore to build nests from pebbles, until the young penguins are developed enough to begin their lives as seabirds. 

PRODUCTS 2

Available exclusively from Duncraft, the Ultimate Oriole Jelly Feeder provides birders with an oriole magnet for your feeding station that features a 4-ounce dish to fill with grape jelly, their favorite treat. You can also serve 2 orange halves on the feeder's sturdy side mounts. This bright orange oriole feeder has an offset clear-view plastic roof and the base creates a unique geometric feeding perch. The clear plastic dish lets you check the jelly level, and this orange feeder made of durable recycled plastic feeder measures 11x8 and 9 inches tall. 

RARE BIRDS

Two First Provincial Records were established recently when birders documented a Bar-tailed Godwit in Prince Edward Island and a Northern House Wren in Northwest Territories. There was also a Second Provincial Record Chimney Swift in Alberta, a Third State Record White-eyed Vireo in Washington, and a Fourth Provincial Record Lark Sparrow in the Northwest Territories. There were also many really rare birds photographed for documentation, including Asian species found in the western Alaska islands such as a Yellow-breasted Bunting, Amur Stonechats, a Pin-tailed Snipe, and 2 Eurasian Bullfinches

Pleasantly surprised to find a favorite duck brood location bustling with recently hatched ducklings, I was especially happy to have the chance to search for duck broods, find some, and photograph most of them. Attentive females with ducklings aged between 1 day and 2½  weeks were spread around the edges of the marsh, eventually numbering 12 broods comprised of 4 species in all: The 2 cavity nesting ducks were Hooded Mergansers and Wood Ducks, plus Mallards, and new brood of 11 newly hatched Northern Shovelers with a special female leading them to feeding shallows. 

During a period characterized by a still breeze and beautiful lighting, a Hooded Merganser hen and her brood of ducklings rested quietly on tranquil water. Using a wider than usual aperture setting of f-11, all members of the family group were in focus (270mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/1000 shutter speed, 800 ISO). 

Dogtown Marsh, better known as Dogtown Waterfowl Production Area is located only 10 miles east of Bismarck and during late June and early July this small marsh usually turns into a very impressive duckling rearing wetland. Dogtown waters have been unusually quiet this spring, but after driving 120 miles across the Missouri Coteau and seeing only a single Mallard brood along the way it was my last hotspot check – and it turned my birding afternoon around from an all-too-typical outing to an exciting bird photography opportunity. This small marsh usually turns into a very impressive duckling rearing wetland, but I thought this visit was too early to find so many duck broods last Wednesday! 

A special photo opportunity was created as the Hooded Merganser ducklings swam nearby and I focused on 3 as 1 duckling raised up to flap its wings and provide some action in the midst of the brood (430mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/1000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

The species and number of ducklings attended by an adult female included 3 Hooded Merganser broods numbering 3, 9, and 4; 2 Wood Duck broods numbering 11 and 6; 2 Northern Shoveler broods with 11 and 6 ducklings; and 5 Mallard broods numbering 6, 7, 3, 6, and 9 ducklings – with all broods being led by an adult female. That’s a total of 81 ducklings – already! And there will undoubtedly be many more broods that will arrive at this relatively small wetland area in coming weeks as more Mallards and Northern Shoveler ducklings continue to hatch, along with later-nesting ducks such as Redheads, Canvasbacks, Blue-winged Teal, and Ruddy Ducks. The chance to photograph a variety of broods of ducklings was especially exciting as the fluffy little guys followed the adult females to reach a feeding location, then spread out a bit around her to forage for small insect larvae that are developing in their aquatic larval stage. 

Although this recently hatched Northern Shoveler brood actually numbered 11, as often happens, some ducklings were positioned outside the photo frame (300mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/1250 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Because there were many more birds involved in each photograph – up to 12 at a time – I opted to use a broader than usual f-11 aperture to keep as many ducklings in focus as they meandered around the adult female. With bright sunlight at my back, the f-11 setting still provided a corresponding shutter speed that averaged about 1/1000 of a second during this photo session. While trying to keep all the ducklings in focus, I have found that it is best to focus on the closest duckling, and hope as many other ducks are within the focal range of the aperture used, the female included. While photographing, I tried to watch for key ducklings and the female to be in a pleasing position, especially with concern for how their heads were turned, and prepared for a little action, like a wing flap or gape stretch among the group. It becomes a bit tricky though when you have several ducklings moving quickly, so it’s worth taking many photos and picking out the best during your review and editing process. That’s when you can also crop extraneous background areas to improve any photograph you choose. 

A close photo of a single Northern Shoveler duckling was possible when the female swam very close past my position with the ducklings following her lead. Note the thick shape of the bill soon after it hatched and imagine how it will expand into a true shoveler bill during coming weeks (600mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/800 shutter speed, 800 ISO). 

With so many ducklings in a brood with the adult female, it was necessary to was to zoom in and out depending on how close the group was to my position, as well as how spread out the ducklings were as they foraged, rested, or followed the adult female. As a result, zoom magnifications varied from 270mm to 600mm. Zooming the lens added another step in the photo process, and at times the movements of the brood required relatively quick zooming action, which is kind of fun too. The entire opportunity was truly enjoyable, exciting, and inviting; so much so that after an hour in Bismarck to get a hair trim from my friend Janine, I couldn’t help but return to Dogtown Marsh to resume photographing duck broods under even better lighting conditions and a subdued breeze from 6 to 7pm. 

A very recently hatched Green-winged Teal brood hugged the female as they swam into the open water of Charo Marsh. After photographing a Western Meadowlark singing, I still had a very narrow aperture setting (f-6) when taking the initial photos of the teal. But luckily, the ducklings remained on the same plane as the female, so all were positioned within the narrow area in focus. Other photos were taken with a wide f-11 aperture after realizing the oversight (600mm zoom lens, f-6 aperture, 1/2000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

As the week continued, more duck broods revealed themselves in my home range, mostly Mallards. But 4 days after my Dogtown encounters, as I was photographing an American Avocet preening, a Marbled Godwit in flight, and a Blue-winged Teal drake resting on the surface of a beautiful watery scene at Charo Marsh, a previously hiding female Green-winged Teal led her newly hatched brood of 7 ducklings out of a new growth of bulrushes and into the same dreamy blue water. The resulting photos were some favorites, partly because of the rareness of the species during the nesting season in this area and partly because the ducklings are so small and seemingly helpless – but that will change quickly as the precocious new downies develop and grow. Photographing ducklings is always fun, fun, fun. As we experience this first week of summer, I hope the beginning of your summer bird photography gets off to a super start – Good Luck! 

By the age of 12 days, ducklings begin to break away from the brood female as they forage, such as these 4 Wood Duck ducklings did last Wednesday (600mm zoom lens, f-11 aperture, 1/800 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

 

                        Article and Photographs by Paul Konrad

 

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