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Late Saturday morning our little family had to decide what it was we were going to do. We hadn’t been to an ocean as a family since we were in California back in December so we decided to head out to Nassau County’s Point Lookout, which is nicely situated on the west side of Jones Inlet.
Last week during a camping trip to Kununurra we encountered a Radjah Shelduck family in one of the irrigation channels around town. The Radjah Shelduck family last week were swimming in the irrigation channel right against the road and so we could pull over and admire them. Radjah Shelduck family.
The female Mistletoebird has moved out of the nest to help feed the chicks and the male Mistletoebird is definitely contributing to a large extent. Here are some of the photos that I have taken over recent days of the Mistletoebird family. The feeding of the two Mistletoebird chicks has been relentless over the past week.
You will notice a definite west coast bias: Mountain Chickadee , Varied Thrush , Black Oystercatcher , and Townsend’s Warbler should give you the idea. I put up $35 so I could get two sets: one to keep and one to give as a present to an undetermined person. The prototype doesn’t have all of the artwork yet.).
These endearing birds are almost always found in pairs or small family groups, and I often have difficulty deciding which bird to photograph as both males and females are equally beautiful. As with most members of this family, males and females are rarely found far from each other. Three species of antshrikes are resident in T&T.
I enjoyed Shakespeare in the Park this weekend, a tradition I definitely missed last year. In addition to working with family to create a new cocktail (the “Christmas in July” which is the liquid that drains from ceviche mixed with vodka, preferably with a chunk of whitefish in it) he got some good birds. How about you?
The tail-end of winter delivered a bird I definitely didn’t expect in Rochester. Corey went for a walk at Jamaica Bay with his family on Saturday evening, after the rain had stopped in New York City and went out again, alone, on Sunday morning before the rain picked back up. Migration cannot begin soon enough!
While I saw some pretty special species this weekend, the most special was the Gray Catbird because my sweet 7-year niece totally got into finding one; I think I’ve found the next generation birder in the family! But watching a Northern Goshawk rip through the sky over Bloomingdale Bog in the Adirondacks was definitely a BBOTW moment.
The family Ardeidae consists on long-legged, long-necked, long-beaked, water birds called waders in North America or maybe just herons, egrets, and bitterns everywhere else. It’s a massive family with worldwide distribution, so I’ll be expecting a tsunami of submissions for this one.
One of the most interesting aspects of watching birds in Africa is to see different members of bird families that I already know from China. An information for those Indian readers of the blog who only know “Kingfisher” as a brand of beer: It is also a bird family. Different bird families, I know.
There was an island in the middle of the river and the tall trees held Yellow-billed Spoonbill nests and there were several families within the vicinity. One family of Yellow-billed Spoonbills all lined up together on the one branch over the river and made for an impressive group of birds. Yellow-billed Spoonbill family.
Then we threw together a semi-planned family-related trip to the States in early December. This Northern Pintail definitely went for a basic brown eye color. But my wife’s and my lives have been rather chaotic of late. First, we had our five-week trip to Spain, Turkey and Jordan in September and October. Amber, perhaps?
The figures show the order of bird families in the four field guides mentioned above. For easier reference, I have given the order of families in the oldest field guide (on the left) a spectral colour pattern and used the same colour for the respective families in the other guides. Order of bird families, non-songbirds.
That was definitely my best sighting. Corey got his Best Bird of the Weekend early this weekend as while he and his family were making their way home from a week-long vacation in Cape Cod on Friday a Black-throated Gray Warbler was found in Queens at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge.
The Pheasant Coucal family have moved on from the last place that we observed them. The bird-life has definitely benefitted by the recent outbreak of locusts. There have been literally thousands of Whiskered Terns feeding close to the highway as you can see by all of the tiny dots in the header photos.
But Swarovski Optik is a family-owned business, so the then CEO, Mr. Swarovski, categorically rejected the advice and decided: factory stays in Austria, and the prices will only go up! You know that classical definition of what separates men from boys? The next day we had an outdoor workshop and a chance to test the toys.
Red-billed Curassow ( Crax blumenbachii ), a large, ground-dwelling bird belonging to the same family as the more familiar Plain Chachalaca of southern Texas, was never a very widespread species. Having a family of endangered Red-billed Curassow willingly approach me to within such a short distance is definitely one of them!
It also summarizes the vagrancy status of every bird family in the whole wide world, which makes it fun to read as well as superbly educational. But it’s a very fluid definition, as the book makes very clear. The Family Accounts are the fun part of the book. Is the ship-assisted vagrant a ‘true’ vagrant?
The best test of that proposition, of course, is to repeat it to any one of the hundreds of thousands of birders who have, say, a family. Birders are almost by definition interesting and interested people, and those interests—even if they don’t push birding completely out of mind—range widely.
Speaking of July, every year around this time an assemblage of my family and friends gather in a remote part of Pennsylvania for food, fun, and flaming chickens. However, while there will definitely be a chicken this year (probably Jackson Pollock-themed), an inferno might be ill-advised considering the tinder-dry condition of the area.
As we walked up the “beautiful river” (which is what “Río Bello” means) Nacho pointed out trees from the dogwood, holly, and linden/basswood families. You might not guess this Lobelia is from the same family as the popular bedding flower with that name — until you see the individual flowers close-up.
So I contacted him for the exact location, which turned out to be a beautiful 14-acre property that belongs to his family, and he kindly invited me over. In other words, they were definitely lifers. Which it was! We didn’t manage to make it happen the first Monday, but on the 28th of June, we birded his property together.
Astounding because she picked up birding before she could speak and surprising because this ability was definitely not inherited from anyone in my family, myself included. Thankfully there are several really excellent family board games that you can play as a whole family. Her natural talent was astounding and surprising.
The Groove-billed Ani is an odd-looking member of the Cuckoo family. You will definitely see it, everywhere except in dense woods. In contrast, it is always a nice surprise for me to see Mourning Doves down here. They are residents, but not common ones. Inca Doves , in my garden. Its characteristic “pee-HOOey!”
One that could take close up shots when we were banding birds, get a wide view for establishing shots of habitat or just something to grab fun photos of friends and family–all while fitting easily in a jacket or pants pocket. There’s definitely better color quality with the SLR but the iPhone photo isn’t bad at all.
Ornithology By Corey • March 2, 2011 • 4 comments Tweet Share If you like science and comic strips you definitely want to read xkcd. Hes only been birding since 2005 but has garnered a respectable life list by birding whenever he wasnt working as a union representative or spending time with his family.
Regardless of the temperatures I got out and about both mornings on my own and in the afternoons with the family. Definitely a migrant and the Osprey that was in the area was not happy about this much larger interloper. There were lots of birds around and my camera was in overdrive! They always live up to the second half.
Lake Kerkini National Park in the north of Greece is the very best birding area in the Balkan Peninsula and definitely among the top ten hotspots of Europe. Last but not least, there were three species of shrikes, Red-backed , Lesser Grey and at least 2 Masked Shrikes , possibly 2 more, an entire family (not all were showing so well).
More importantly, I know which groups/families occur in these regions, which ones resemble each other, and where to find them in my books even in cases where similar groups are found in different segments of my field guide because they are not closely related to each other. This means I know my birds quite well.
It is definitely a nest with a view! I observed the whole Pied Oystercatcher family at the water’s edge and the chicks were exposed and vulnerable. The pair closer to Gantheaume Point are still incubating their second clutch of two eggs and have chosen to nest in exactly the same place as the first clutch.
The Home Place is definitely solid, and it also sparkles. In some ways his story is familiar to a lot of birders: the outdoors was both recreation and refuge for him, his family imbued him with a love of learning and an appreciation for the earth. And sure, some stinkers make it out there between the covers. Drew Lanham is a black man.
North of the equator, schools will be letting out for the summer and families will be packing up for adventure. Travel is definitely on my mind because Corey and I are both off to explore new parts of the world this weekend. Exotic locales make for exotic birding and even the most mundane territory can astound the first time visitor.
The second sound that we heard belonged to another fantastic member of the cotinga family, the White Bellbird. This small member of the toucan family is a stunner. They were definitely mobbing something. The call is so bizarre that it sounds as if it might be two pieces of hollow metal piping being banged together.
Though they look like sparrows they are weavers from the family Ploceidae or, to be more specific, they are Euplectes franciscanus. If you see a bird that seems like it could almost be a Grasshopper Sparrow but definitely isn’t you are likely looking at a female Orange Bishop. The Le Conte’s Sparrow was not refound.
And, in return, they share their expertise with me — definitely a win-win situation. But he regularly visits family in Morelia. Talk about a collateral benefits — we now both have new birding buddies, they have a church (which made sure they had everything they could need upon arrival), and our church has a new family!
Wood-Wrens, which like to live close to the ground in deep brush, definitely follow this rule; they are not at all colorful, but their song sure does ring. It is not that close of a relative of the Northern Mockingbird , being in the same family, but a different genus. That is because it is, well, a Mockingbird.
As soon as I got a good look of one of these, I checked my Merlin recordings, and discovered that the particular species in question does have a call very unlike the usual clicks and buzzes I associate with the family. But the Hummingbirds definitely won the day! just north of the Mexican border.
Hey, in 1959 Walt Disney set up a studio on the island and filmed Swiss Family Robinson there! It was this post right here on 10,000 Birds I ended up bookmarking as the definitive source for ID’ing these two species. The island of Tobago in the southern Caribbean is much wilder than one could imagine.
“In 80 birding tours to more than 100 countries, that was definitely the best day of birding I have ever had in my life!’ A family of endangered Wattled Cranes might be a highlight of the lower sections of the Sani Pass road, by Adam Riley. The endemic Bush Blackcap is now placed in the babbler family, photo by Adam Riley .
Here in central Mexico, the winter season always seems to begin with the arrival of various members of the sandpiper family. Definitely an adult. Action was bound to beat contemplation, and so he wrote about his returning waders before I wrote about mine. Let that be a lesson, to me. They have farther to go, but they also leave sooner.
There was definitely only one youngster there. Addendum: My time with the Red-tailed Hawk family didn’t end with fledging. On June 5, I thought one of the youngsters had fledged, because I only saw one youngster in the nest.I saw two hawks perched on the catwalk railing, which was what the parents often did.
And Giant Otters are still common in the rivers around Karanambu Ranch, home of the late “otter lady”, Diane McTurck, who used to rehabilitate orphaned otters and whose family still runs the lodge. These are the purple-colored skittles, not quite as tasty as the red ones, but definitely firm fan favorites.
But if you really want to rack up the numbers on each and every outing, you should definitely come here in the winter. Once I moved beyond the reservoir area, it was once again the hummingbird family that gave me the best photos. Four Least Grebes at once! That’s a personal best.
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