Thursday, June 18, 2015

Gray Hawk nest with five chicks!

Here's a great shot by Bill Supulski of the Gray Hawk nest with a record five chicks.  This is the largest clutch documented for Gray Hawks.

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Bully! - Martin Refuge

I had the great fortune to spend a few hours at the Martin Refuge, a premier photo ranch in south Texas.  I could fill the blog with the hundreds of images of just these three species, but I think I'll leave it at this.  It's a spectacular experience!

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Rusty Blackbird at Santa Ana NWR

I don't have any photo editing software right now, so these are full frame and not enhanced.  It was a dull and dreary afternoon at Santa Ana NWR - at least weather-wise it was.  The rain held off, and we were able to relocate one of the Rusty Blackbirds reported yesterday and refound this morning.  The location was originally Willow Lake #1, the small pond on the tram loop.  After JD arrived, it moved to the dike separating Willow Lake #1 from Willow Lake #2.  

This bird has a pale eye, rufous fringes on the tertials and flight feathers, and a thin bill compared to a female Brewer's Blackbird.  Note also the habitat selection as the area is a brushy swamp, quite different from the typical Brewer's Blackbird habitat in the Lower Rio Grande Valley (feed lots and big box store parking lots).  

Thanks to those that found it and reported it!  










Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Thayer's Gull, Brownsville Landfill, 2/14/2015

I went to the dump (excuse me, the Brownsville Sanitary Landfill) on 2/14 mostly because I could. There are very few dumps that allow birders access into the landfill, and I always enjoy the time I spent sorting through the gulls.  Others had found a Thayer's Gull earlier in the week, so I had my eyes peeled for a large, Herring Gull-sized first winter gull.  Here's the Thayers as I first saw it.  It looks massive compared to the Laughing Gulls.  There are some Herring Gulls behind it, and it still looks larger than I would  have expected for an Iceland Gull.  This bird is on the pale end of Thayer's Gull, yet to me it is too large and the secondary bar is too dark for an Iceland Gull.  
 I was entertained by the Thayer's Gull flying around chasing other gulls and returning to the same area in good light.  Note the darker outer webs to the primaries.  It was fairly windy so the gull was flying slowly (almost at stalling speed into the  wind) which made in flight photos easier to get.
It ended up close to the car, but not  near any Herring Gulls.  I guess that would have been asking too much!  If you go to the dump, go when it hasn't rained recently, take a high clearance vehicle, and stay out of the way of the trucks - both the workers and the dump trucks.  It's a rare treat to be allowed into a working landfill these days.

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Lesser Black-backed Gulls, Brownsville Sanitary Landfill, Brownsville CBC

I took advantage of the Brownsville CBC to bird at the Brownsville Sanitary Landfill (aka the dump).  Since I was asked for photos of the Lesser Black-backed Gulls and am temporarily unable to crop or edit pics I decided to post them here.  Here's a mob of hungry gulls.  

And here's two Lesser Black-backed Gulls.  I'm the first to admit one isn't 100% identifiable here, but the dark first winter to the right of the adult Lesser (that slaty colored bird on the left) is a Lesser as well.  
And here's another bird. I had five total individuals for the CBC, with distinctive plumage features or age differences from the other birds.  



Thursday, April 24, 2014

Phil Ziegler's TUFTED FLYCATCHER

Found and photographed by Phil Ziegler at Padre Island National Seashore at 4:33 PM Tuesday 4/22. The location is near the "Oak Tree" area.  Thanks to Phil for permission to post these photos here.  The photos are reduced in size but otherwise not manipulated.  Watch for a link to more pictures on his Flickr site shortly!