Showing posts with label Sandhill Crane. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sandhill Crane. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

A Photo Review of 2012

Sometimes it is good to look back, and a New Year provides a good opportunity/excuse to do so. Here are a few of the Birding/Photography images which stand out for me during 2012.

"Morning Flight" - Sandhill Cranes, Bosque del Apache, NM, 02/02/12
"Why Is It Called Ring-necked?" - Ring-necked Duck, Forsyth NWR, NJ, 03/07/12
"Alone" - Solitary Sandpiper, Herricks Cove, VT, 05/05/12
"Untitled" - Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, Herricks Cover, VT, 05/06/12
"What's Up" - Chestnut-sided Warbler, Brookline, VT, 05/27/12
"Kids!" - Hooded Merganser, Putney Wetlands, VT, 05/27/12
"Leap" - Spotted Sandpiper, South Newfane, VT 08/02/12
"Yellow Blossom" - Ruby-throated Hummingbird, South Newfane, VT, 08/17/12
"Untitled" - American Oystercatcher, Cape May, NJ, 08/29/12
"On Your Way" - Red-tailed Hawk, Cape May, NJ, 08/29/12
"The Stoop" - Merlin, Putney Mountain, VT, 09/14/12
"Ignore Him!" - Red Crossbills, Salisbury Beach, NH, 12/06/12
"Friends" - Sanderling & Dunlin, Parker River NWR, MA, 12/06/12
May your birding be good in 2013!

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Bosque del Apache - A Second Morning

The second morning was just as impressive as the first - no ho-hum seen it before - but breathtaking display by the Sandhill Cranes ...


Another family group contemplates "take off" ...


Good Birding!!

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Bosque del Apache - Sandhill Cranes

Here is a second sampling of the Sandhill Cranes at Bosque del Apache.

We visited the refuge just after sunrise (about 7am). The cranes roost at night in shallow ponds. The ponds protect the birds from night predators, such as coyotes. In the morning, they take flight, a few at a time, and head to fields where they forage for grain.

By the time we arrived, hundreds had already departed, but hundreds more remained. Here is the context ...


... a family group ...


... many just hang out ...


... morning stretches ...



... take off ...


Good Birding!!

Saturday, February 25, 2012

Bosque del Apache - Cranes in Flight

Sooner or later, a birder, bird watcher, or nature lover needs to find his/her way to Bosque del Apache Nat'l Wildlife Refuge on the Rio Grande in New Mexico during the winter. Managed for wintering waterfowl, it is a spectacle. When we visited in early February, there were an estimated 8,000+ Sandhill Cranes, 40,000 Snow Geese - the "signature" species. But they were hardly alone.

And ... they were accessible. Just inside the refuge boundaries, there were roosting ponds filled with cranes. It was a photographers delight, and there were photographers present with all levels of equipment. The problem is, with all those photographers, you know that there are lots of good photos being taken. So sifting through the hundreds of photos that one takes has the added challenge of trying to find those which may be above average.

I'm not sure if I have made those judgments correctly, but following is a sampling of the results.

We arrived at the first roosting pond very shortly after sunrise. The spectacle held us until the sun had climbed well above the horizon.

Sandhill Cranes in flight ....







Good Birding!!

Saturday, January 24, 2009

When Good Birding is Not Important

BISBEE, ARIZONA: Last weekend we attended “Wings Over Willcox,” a small, delightful birding festival which focuses on the concentration of wintering birds in the Sulphur Springs Valley north and south of Willcox. Raptors flock to the valley. In places it seemed that a Red-tailed Hawk was perched on every fourth utility pole, with kestrels occupying the lines between the poles. The uncommon Ferruginous Hawk, the largest buteo, was seen overhead, perched on the ground, and on a utility pole. An owl roost included Great-horned, Long-eared, and Barn Owls.

Scattered through the arid grasslands of the valley are small wetlands filled with ducks, geese (including some Snow Geese), grebes, several herons, and a few shorebirds, all attractive to a birder in search of good birding.

But the iconic wintering bird, drawn by wetlands and fallow agricultural fields to be gleaned for grain, are the thousands of Sandhill Cranes which winter in the valley. They lift from their night roosts at dawn, filling the airwaves with their rolling bugles, and smudging the clear desert sky with their dark masses. People with only the most casual interest in birds gape as long, noisy v-formations pass overhead, as they rise from, or come down to, a roost with a cacophony of beating and braking wings.

Winter birding in Southeast Arizona is pale compared to spring migration and summer nesting, but remarkable nonetheless, with permanent residents, northern migrants, and Mexican vagrants providing innumerable opportunities. In Southeast Vermont, you might struggle to see thirty species on a January day; three times that number is quite reasonable in the basin and range of the desert southwest.

However, when we did our planning for this January trip to Arizona, our priority was not birding. Our priority was to be in a place on January 20 where we could watch the Presidential Inauguration.

On one of the birding festival bus trips, my spouse heard the driver say something like: there are too many Africans. I don’t want to parse the comment, but it did make me reflect on why a white male of northern European ancestry should feel such a sense of accomplishment in the inauguration of President Obama.

I grew up in the 1950s. My parents worked to build their American dream, aware of events but not strongly engaged in those events. Schools struggled to cope with the post-war baby boom; education was still slowly evolving from the simpler past. Political correctness and inclusiveness lay in the future. As I recall, history was a telling of the conventional truth, straightforward, simple, and perhaps even simplistic. But something in the atmosphere of the post-war decades infused my generation with an idealism - an idealism that accepted Jefferson’s Preamble to the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights as the way the world is meant to be.

Then other things began make their impact on me. I remember in the late 1950s traveling with my grandfather. I remember the first time in Virginia when we needed the men’s room; we went through the door marked “Whites;” another door was marked, “Colored.” Later we used the water fountain marked “Whites.”

The minister of the large church in which I grew up in Detroit was one of the great pulpiteers of his generation. To this day, I can remember a few snippets of his sermons. But I also remember that when blacks were being turned away from churches in the south on Sunday mornings that his pulpit made no comment or reference.

I remember a friend who lost his position as president of a theological seminary because he walked next to Martin Luther King, Jr., in a civil rights march in Alabama. I remember the chills which “I Have a Dream” sent through me, incorporating a vision of ideals becoming reality. I remember in the late 1960s walking with thousands in a civil rights march in Newark, New Jersey.

So many citizens have not been given the full benefits of our country, for the most superficial of reasons. I have to feel good that they feel so good about the realization of hopes and dreams.

In addition to what I view as a welcome political change, this Tuesday, January 20, is also a confirmation of youthful idealism - that there is reality in those hopeful documents from the earliest years of our history. I’ve been around long enough to have worn out the rosy lens and to grasp hard realities. For a few moments, I have returned youthful idealism. How great that is!

I enjoy a day of good birding. But even the best day of birding is trumped by a day of history and an affirmation of one’s ideals with their promise and their hope.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Arizona Sampler, 3

I'll be heading up Cave Creek Canyon later today and will be without internet until I finally return home around the 30th. I hope to have additional photos, and of course, columns and descriptions of the birding in Arizona. My columns are scheduled to be posted, as usual, on the next couple of Saturdays.

Sandhill Cranes, late afternoon, at Whitewater Draw ...

Vermillion Flycatcher ...

Mexican Jay ...

grazing American Widgeons, near golf course and treatment ponds in Willcox ...

young Black-crowned Night Heron, also at wetlands near Willcox golf course ...


Good Birding!

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Arizona Sampler, 2

Sandhill Cranes ...

Phainopepla ...

Ferruginous Hawk ...

Greater Roadrunner ...

Loggerhead Shrike ...


Good Birding!

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails