Christopher See

Observing birds and changes

Abuzz in so many ways is the best manner by which I might describe the weekend’s grand outing into the park. As it may have been obvious by now, I had taken some time off from regularly photographing wildlife through the last year. What I did accomplish was a myriad of other projects spanning the most random of topics, and I’ll post about those in the coming months as time permits. As I attempt to ease regular wildlife photography into the daily schedule, it’ll have to be shared with the processing time required for the year-supply of backlogged photographs. Having this many photographs to review is still a great problem to have, but I am curious as to how ever well those photographs turned out.
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Returning to the relevance at hand, the park is dynamic as ever, and I couldn’t help but consider what has changed since my last full day immersion into a landscape I once frequented multiple times every day. Among the diversity of new birding faces and shiny new sets of photographic equipment bobbing around the wooded paths, I recognized quite a number of old acquaintances, all of whom, I’m happy to report, are doing as well as before or even better. The environment is also strangely different than I recall, mostly small changes, but it seems to affect where the birds would hang out on their long journey. A few missing trees, an additional bunch of new flowers, freshly woodchipped paths and a finally-fixed drainage problem are just the first physical alterations that could come to mind. Lastly, of course, the variety and frequency of migrating birds through the park is notably different, with some previous rarities becoming more prevalent, some rarities completely unnoted, and some common migrants hardly making any appearance. This, of course, does not necessarily pertain to this park in specific.
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The birds, about which you must be wondering, for half a day’s worth of birding, were of great satisfaction. I started really early, and similarly, ended early around lunchtime. Here’s a bird list to appease your appetite:
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{section list=”
American goldfinch
black-and-white warbler
black-capped chickadee
blue-winged warbler
blue jay
chipping sparrow
common grackle
eastern towhee
hermit thrush
indigo bunting
Nashville warbler
northern parula
palm warbler
red-bellied woodpecker
red-winged blackbird
ruby-crowned kinglet
song sparrow
veery
white-throated sparrow
wood thrush
yellow-bellied sapsucker
yellow-rumped warbler
yellow-throated warbler
“}{/section}
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Getting back into the game required a quick refresher on the season’s offerings, i.e. scanning the guide book, as well as familiar and fun old techniques, e.g. looking vertically up for an extended duration as passersby wonder when you lost your mind, gazing into backlit objects and pretending the human eye perceives more dynamic range for the allowance of an ID, looking for the smallest blob of yellow feathers in the tallest tree of yellow-green leaves and convincing yourself that the leaf is really special.
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Of all these birds, the most notable was a yellow-throated warbler, as it was a first for myself (I recall a previous sighting last year, but I was unable to check it out for myself). The second was a female yellow-rumped warbler in breeding plumage that ventured in close while foraging.
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{section src=”/wp-content/uploads/images/cs/journal/16005″ width=”960″ height=”640″ img=”
cs7389.jpg;Veery
cs7406.jpg;Yellow-throated warbler
cs7541.jpg;Indigo bunting
cs7552.jpg;Black-and-white warbler
cs7642.jpg;Yellow-bellied sapsucker
“}{/section}
;;
{section src=”/wp-content/uploads/images/cs/journal/16005″ width=”960″ height=”640″ img=”
cs7682.jpg;Yellow-rumped warbler
cs7615.jpg;Black-and-white warbler
cs7750.jpg;Yellow-rumped warbler
cs7998.jpg;Wood thrush
cs7219.jpg;Nashville warbler
“}{/section}
;;
Enjoy!