WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7, 2026   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES

BIRDING NEWS 1

Texas has long been a birding mecca throughout the year, and the economic benefits of highlighting birding and eco-tourism in San Antonio, Texas is showing that residents and businesses are seeing the positive impacts economically, ecologically, and emotionally. According to Steven Nivin, PhD, for every $1 invested in birding-related projects it is forecast that $9 will be realized in direct and indirect benefits to the people and city of San Antonio. Birding-based eco-tourism has been acknowledged as an economic opportunity, and the city, Audubon, and other interested groups are investing as a result.

BIRDING NEWS 2

For the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 2025 marked another extraordinary year for eBird, Merlin, Macaulay Library, and Birds of the World. As the birding community reached incredible milestones in worldwide participation, engagement, and conservation data gathering, the Lab provided enhanced tools and expanded content to unprecedented numbers of people around the world. By connecting people to birds, more people entered the birding world than ever before, including 140,000 first-time eBird users and 9.6 million new Merlin users!

BIRDING NEWS 3

Few people are aware of just how important the tongue is to a woodpecker, but researchers have found that woodpeckers rely on their extraordinary tongue to thread into insect tunnels their beak can't reach. A typical woodpecker tongue is long and flexible enough to reach into crevices and tunnels to reach prey hidden deep inside. Clearly, drilling into wood with its beak is just the first step for a woodpecker to procuring food in bark, branches, trunks, and even beneath the ground. Two pairs of muscles guide the tongue, allowing it to move in and out, and in multiple directions when probing. 

EDITOR AFIELD

Happy New Year and Welcome Back to weekly issues of The Birding Wire for 2026. While we hope you had a wonderful holiday period, I enjoyed some memorable avian observations, and photo opportunities, beginning back on Saturday, December 20th. After impatiently waiting for a month of days for a clear, sunny day to coincide with a day I had an open schedule to conduct my first SoDak winter raptor survey of the season. I've been doing this survey during winter months for 10 years now, during which I drive the same transect that is kinda centered at Pierre, South Dakota; counting raptors about 50 miles north and south of the capitol city.

GEAR

The fully multi-coated ED prime lenses used in Bushnell Engage EDX 8x42 Binoculars reveal the vibrant colors and details of birds' plumage and sharp views of their eyes, beak, feet, and tail under good field conditions. The impressive optics include a dielectric prism coating that provides 92 percent light transmission through the optics for the brightest views of magnified birds and ensure vivid color reproduction in your views. The Engage EDX 8x42 Binoculars provide a class-leading wide field of view of 426 feet at 1,000 yards, which provides a broad perspective when searching for the next birds.

PRODUCTS 1

An exceptional tube feeder in its own right, the Squirrel Buster Legacy Feeder is the best squirrel-proof feeder available – and it is a favorite at feeding stations across the United States and Canada. This truly squirrel-proof feeder has a weight-adjustable closing mechanism, chew-proof construction, and a patented seed tube ventilation system to keep seeds fresh. You receive unlimited Lifetime Care and a Lifetime Limited Warranty, plus all feeder components are UV resistant to keep your feeder looking like new. 

PRODUCTS 2

Hot off the presses, The Owl Handbook provides a thoughtfully researched, accessible guide filled with hundreds of color photographs to explore the natural history and lives of the complex and captivating variety of owls. In The Owl Handbook, lifelong birder and author John Shewey leads us through an exploration of owls' cultural impact and provides in-depth investigations into the 19 owl species found in North America, along with an insightful survey of 200 species of owls from around the world. He also provides advice about how to respectfully observe and protect these impressive birds – the owls.

RARE BIRDS

With Christmas Bird Counts helping to fuel rare bird sightings being reported, the tops must be the First Canadian Record Taiga Flycatcher found in Vancouver, British Columbia, which also established a first for the province! Three new First State Records reported by birders included an Arctic Loon in Montana, a Groove-billed Ani in Georgia, and a Short-billed Gull in New Jersey. Three Second State Records included a Crested Caracara in Nebraska, a Cassin's Finch in Michigan, and a Cassin's Sparrow in New York – and there are many more rare sightings to report! 

BIRD PHOTOGRAPHY

Raptors provide dynamic flight photographs with dramatic outlines varying from widespread wings and tail during soaring flights to diving or gliding views with wings bent inward. Within the same second of time a raptor can move its wings from above its back to below its underside, providing ever-changing views and images as you follow its line of flight. Rough-legged Hawks provide some added flight opportunities because they often employ hovering as part of their flight repertoire when hunting on the wing. 

Raptors like this adult male Rough-legged Hawk provide a variety of photo positions as they wing across the sky, with wing positions and body views changing in fractions of seconds. What more can you hope for when in search of active subjects to photograph? (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/4000 shutter speed, 800 ISO.) 

Rough-legs also offer a variety of plumages for birders to photograph that include some subtle variations among adult females and first-year hawks. But in the case of adult males, each male is unique to some degree, especially in the pattern and colors that can be seen on the mostly white underside of a male hawk. Showing as varied forms of lines, spots, and bands of colors that range in shades of gray to black, tan to brown, and sometimes showing all 4 of these colors in interesting patterns against a base of white feathers. As a result, males tend to be more showy, but they also seem to be less common among birds wintering south of their Arctic nesting range. One more plumage is more common among Rough-legged Hawks than other raptor species – the dark morph individuals that have a fairly uniform chocolate brown coloration among females, and dark brown to jet black plumage among males. 

This is the same male hawk pictured in the above photograph moments later, showing a sample of the variety of flight positions you can photograph when a raptor presents itself. The aperture is basic, and the shutter speed fast enough to stop lightning (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/4000 shutter speed, 800 ISO). 

During the recent holiday break, the most commonly encountered birds in my area after Ring-necked Pheasants were Rough-legged Hawks. It started with a couple Rough-legs nearby, including a dark morph male just 2 miles west of home, and a female 12 miles north on December 15th, but the real breakthrough was December 23rd when I was surprised by 3 Rough-legs hunting along the same mile of mixed grassland and wetland habitat 25 miles from home. I was already running late on a drive to Fargo, so I only observed the hawks for 5 minutes under a gloomy gray sky, but vowed to be back when the sun broke through the clouds. 

The distinctive dark-brown belly band is indicative of female Rough-legged Hawks, as is the dark band along the terminal end of the wing feathers and near the end of the tail. First-year Rough-legs look similar to adult females, but their wing and tail bands are light gray (600mm zoom lens, f-9 aperture, 1/1600 shutter speed, 1600 ISO).

The next morning the sun shined bright, pressing me back to what I would call “The Rough-leg Plain” with the hope of photographing hawks. With more time to spend, I had a chance to observe 3 unique-looking adult males and at least 3 adult females, maybe 4 – all within a 2 square mile area. “The Plain” has a little-used road that bisects it east and west, and another rarely used road that bisects it north and south – roads that proved helpful when positioning near hunting Rough-legs that were perched or in flight, sometimes hovering. 

A close look at this adult female shows it has the dark brown eyes of an adult Rough-legged Hawk – immatures have amber-colored irises. This female shows dark-brown colored “belly plumage” extending up to the breast (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/4000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

To keep myself positioned with the southern sun at my back and a bird before me, I had to make some small adjustments in my usual ways of getting into photo position. With the predominantly north wind of winter, the birds flew, glided, and hovered facing into the wind, which meant a hawk would either be showing its tail end if hunting on the north side of the road, or showing a shadowed front end if positioned south of the road, but neither option provided optimum views or lighting for photography. As a result, I began positioning south of a hawk hunting on the wing north of the road, then waited for it to turn right or left, or even circle or reposition in flight – and that’s when photo ops sometimes were created and that technique worked effectively a number of times. 

Another technique I used was to park a distance away from a perched Rough-leg to wait for it to take flight – sometimes in a downward dive toward prey, sometimes to begin the next soaring or hovering hunt on the north side of the road. Similarly, I was able to intercept the flight of a hawk as it moved to the north side of the road, and one time in particular I was able to get in position as a female flew across the road to land and perch in the midst of heavily frosted tree branches, providing an especially unique photo opportunity illuminated in the morning sunlight. 

Other opportunities to photograph perched hawks were presented on occasion along the north-south road where I could approach a perched bird with the sun at my back, then park my mobile blind where I could wait for the hawk to take flight. Sometimes a Rough-leg would begin a flying hunt, or make a direct hunting approach toward potential prey it saw. I try my best not to approach too close to a perched bird, instead getting into a position where the hawk might provide a closer photo when it repositions to begin or end a hunt. 

What luck to have one of the hawks land at the top of especially frost-covered branches, providing a beautiful setting for an adult female that is equally emphasized by the clear blue sky background (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/4000 shutter speed, 800 ISO). 

At the same time, I experienced a lot of individual variation among the hawks as to how close I could approach. Some showed an obvious nervousness at my slow approach from a distance, making me stop short of my intended parking spot. But others allowed me to park within photo range, where I waited for the hawk to initiate a hunting action – and sometimes that was to fly directly toward me, low, and I tried to make the most of each photo op that transpired. Any time a hawk is flying within photo range, it’s good to follow its movements through the camera lens as much as possible so you have the bird in focus when you anticipate it will move into just the right position for a photo, or series of photos. 

A gliding adult male shows a light underside coloration of white with accents of gray, black, and a bit of tan as it zips ever lower from a high soaring position (600mm zoom lens, f-8 aperture, 1/1250 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Perhaps the most unusual aspect of the Rough-legged Hawk concentration was that although I surveyed areas 100 miles to the southwest, 90 miles south and southeast, 50 miles north and 100 miles east, 35 miles northwest, and 380 miles east, I only observed 1 other Rough-legged Hawk. This species is apt to gather in small hunting groups like I encountered at The Rough-leg Plain, which is most likely because the immediate area is a rich open hunting site with an abundant population of voles. But there are many, many similar or better hunting locations along the transects I described above. Why there, and seemingly nowhere else? 

Compare this adult male Rough-leg with a “polka-dotted” underside to the above male’s underside plumage to appreciate the variety of plumage colors and markings on the underside of males (600mm zoom lens, f-10 aperture, 1/1250 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

The area experienced a pretty intense blizzard for 2 nights and 1 day between Christmas and New Years Day, which I feared would push the raptors farther south, but most continued to hold their ground at The Plain. All I can say is: I was especially happy to be able to visit and revisit this wintering group of Rough-legged Hawks so close to home, to observe their behaviors, movements, and hunts while having a variety of opportunities to photograph these Arctic-nesting hawks from the far north lingering for an extended period within a half-hour’s drive of home! I hope you enjoyed some fulfilling birding experiences over the holiday season, camera in hand and look forward to many more during the new year ahead. 

 

                       Article and Photographs by Paul Konrad

 

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