WEDNESDAY, JULY 2, 2025   |   SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES   

ANNOUNCEMENT
The staff at The Birding Wire wants to wish you a wonderful holiday weekend as we approach the 4th of July, and we hope birds add to your enjoyment of this extended summer holiday! At this half-way point in the year we will be taking a short summer break, but you can expect your next issue the morning of Wednesday July 16th. We thank all of you for your interest and support, and we look forward to sharing a variety of birds and birding topics with you throughout the year.
BACKYARD BIRDING
It’s always fun to see another birders’ feeding station as you walk or drive through a residential area, or to view the birds at feeders when you visit a nature center, Audubon center, or national wildlife refuge. While not all of the public areas have a feeding station, that’s part of the treasure hunt – kinda like a scavenger hunt or a “Where’s Waldo” session – in which you look for the next feeding station. Why search for another feeding station? You can get ideas from other feeding stations you find or stumble upon, and see what birds are visiting, what foods are being offered, and more.
BIRDING NEWS
For the 103rd year, the Association of Field Ornithologists will hold their Annual Meeting, this year in Ogden, Utah, July 29 to August 1. The Association of Field Ornithologists (AFO) is one of the world’s major societies of professional and avocational ornithologists dedicated to the scientific study and dissemination of information about birds in their natural habitats. This year the Western Bird Banding Association (WBBA) is joining the AFO meeting to highlight the importance of bird banding in concert with broader bird research methods.
Have you ever seen a downy puffin nestling? You will probably be surprised by what it looks like as it matures, and now you can see a puffin nestling and an occasional adult in a rocky crevice – a nesting burrow. The live puffin camera views give a glimpse inside and outside a puffin burrow, where puffins nest and loaf during the nesting season and for a time thereafter. You can also view nearby loafing areas where you can see Atlantic Puffins, possibly joined by Razorbills or a Common Murre – all very interesting seabirds found on Seal Island off the coast of Maine.

EDITOR AFIELD
A cardinal singing in my yard? Seriously? The song of a male Northern Cardinal is quite unmistakable, but it’s still hard to believe this first time visitor was present. I’m so visually oriented that it’s hard to trust my ears alone – ha. I watched and waited, hoping it would give me a verifying look, but it must have relocated out of vocal range. Speaking of singing songbirds though, the prairies have been alive with the sounds and sights of territorial songbirds including Bobolinks, Western Meadowlarks, Grasshopper Sparrows, Song Sparrows, Savannah Sparrows, the first Dickcissels, and more.
GEAR
Celestron’s high quality ED glass objective lenses deliver visibly brighter, sharper images for birders compared to non-ED models, and the difference is especially apparent in low light conditions, such as during cloudy periods, in shaded locations, and at dawn and dusk. Celestron Regal ED 10x42 Binoculars deliver an impressive array of features that birders prefer, including a little more magnification than an 8x model, field flattener technology that delivers edge-to-edge clarity, and the ED glass that provides views of birds with increased resolution and contrast.
PRODUCTS
A standout new book, Birds of North America: A Photographic Atlas is a brilliant publication that provides up-to-date information and exceptional photographs to illustrate all 1,144 bird species ever documented in North America, including Hawaiian birds and vagrant species. Featuring more than 1,200 full-color photographs and illustrations, plus more than 700 large-format color range maps, this comprehensive reference book is a gem for anyone interested in birds – it truly belongs in every home, library, and science classroom!
Enjoy a miniature waterfall right in your birdbath with a Miniature Rock Waterfall an exclusive Duncraft product that adds a natural-looking base and the sound of trickling water to your yard. The electric pump circulates at a 2 gallon per minute rate and works is meant to operate in more than 1½ inches of water to create a continuous, gentle trickle of water that will attract more birds while creating a restful atmosphere for you and others. Measuring 7½ x 6¼ x 5 inches high, the Miniature Rock Waterfall is made of gray resin to resemble stacked rocks.
 

Even when you have the perfect setting for a new duck family to swim through, with calm water reflecting bright blue sky, how do you get 5 downy ducklings led by an adult Blue-winged Teal to provide such a pleasing testament to the beginning of the summer duckling hatch. Trying not to worry the week-old ducklings or the female, I waited for them to move from one feeding area to the next, hoping they would swim through a more open space – and they did! I took several photographs, but this image was the one that had the best lighting, colors, and spacing among the ducks. However, it had one flaw: I misjudged the end of the last duckling by a couple inches, so it’s not perfect, but what is? I used a relatively broad f-10 aperture with the hope of having all the ducks in focus, and the shutter speed was fast enough to stop all the action and a provide sharp image. I’ve taken a lot of photographs of duck broods, but this is a standout, in spite of the little flaw – or maybe because of it. Perhaps it will become a conversation piece (600mm zoom lens, f-10 aperture, 1/1000 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

I used the same technique to photograph this adult female Northern Shoveler and her brood of 10-day-old ducklings – photographing on a mostly sunny afternoon with the lowered sun behind me to illuminate the ducks and the water. The fluffy white clouds that broke up the blue sky Saturday afternoon provided an interesting pattern reflected on the water. Each female with a brood tends to act as an individual, and while this shoveler didn’t overreact to my presence, she calmly gave a low call that brought the ducklings into a close huddle – seemingly not out of fear, but out of caution. And after taking 3 photos I left them to resume their foraging period in the open water. In this case the light was not as pronounced, so while I wanted a wide aperture to keep all the ducklings in focus, I had to compromise by using an f-9 aperture, but that brought the shutter speed lower than I would usually consider acceptable when using a zoom lens with high magnification – just 1/320 of a second. But by stabilizing the lens against my car’s window frame and holding my breath, the resulting photos were perfectly sharp and all the ducklings are in focus, along with the elegant female (500mm zoom lens, f-9 aperture, 1/320 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Although this is a rather mundane portrait of Eastern Kingbird, the evening sunlight was perfect as it highlighted the gray, white, and black plumage of the flycatcher, and how could I resist a photo of any bird with that deep blue lake water as a backdrop. Even so, I wanted to ensure the background was a uniform color, so I blurred it out of focus by using an f-6 aperture. When viewing the kingbird’s plumage and even individual feathers on the big screen of my computer, it’s quite impressive to see the levels of subtle detail and color variation revealed in this photograph, along with the sunlight reflecting on the kingbird’s beak and eye (600mm zoom lens, f-6 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Not far down that same very rural road, a Wilson’s Snipe provided an opportunity to take a similar portrait with the added element of some action as the snipe called on territory. The birds were particularly active in the early evening sunlight, and it seemed many were advertising their territory or still hoping to attract a mate. The background colors of marsh sedges were blurred out of focus by using the narrow f-6 aperture, and the resulting color compliments the snipe’s plumage in a pleasing way. Snipe also perform a dramatic flight display accompanied by more of a ‘winnowing’ sound, but this bird maintained its stationary perch (600mm zoom lens, f-6 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Expanding the idea of a species portrait beyond a close-up, I composed a more environment-laden view of a territorial Bobolink singing in a meadow filled with a variety of grasses and flowering plants. It was a toss-up as to whether I should try to emphasize the bird in this landscape by blurring the surrounding plants out of focus with a narrow f-6 aperture, or retaining a more natural view of the surrounding meadow vegetation, perhaps overpowering the smallish Bobolink in song. Actually, I was positioned so far away that this was the only image that showed the bird in focus during its rather physical singing bout in which it even spread its wings to its sides and fanned its tail at times. The Bobolink also performed flight displays complete with songs, but the photos I took of those arial forays were slightly out of focus too. But I wanted to share this image as something different, even if it is a bit of a compromise from the photos I envisioned while taking them in the field (600mm zoom lens, f-6 aperture, 1/2500 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

A tranquil view of a pair of nesting Pied-billed Grebes, one incubating with the other resting close by in the midst of a small shallow marsh partly covered with small flowering emergent plants. The setting of this new nest in the open, surrounded by the aquatic carpet of tiny blooms, made a unique setting for a quick photograph with the hope of not disturbing the ambiance of the moment. The grebes built the nest close to a relatively busy country road, but I needed to zoom out to include more of the surroundings and both grebes. I also dialed in a very wide f-13 aperture setting to ensure both birds were in focus and that more flowered landscape was clear too. Now I await the possibility of photographing downy grebe hatchlings in a few weeks (400mm zoom lens, f-13 aperture, 1/400 shutter speed, 800 ISO).

Good Luck as you devote a little more holiday time to your bird photography interests. It’s certainly prime time to photograph a variety of birds in most areas of North America, and perhaps you’ve even planned some extra vacation time to travel beyond your neighborhood. Enjoy these early days of July!

Article and Photographs by Paul Konrad

Share your bird photos and birding experiences at editorstbw2@gmail.com

 
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