Showing posts with label George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George C. Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary. Show all posts

Wednesday, 2 March 2016

Ten Days of Winter Birding

Feb 16-26 The Lower Mainland/Various locations.

It was Valentine's Day and a Great Gray Owl had been reported on Burnaby Mountain. Why couldn't it be a Monday or a Tuesday or one of my other week days off! I would just have to wait, besides I had planned to spend the day with my lovely wife. From what I had heard there were far too many photographers and birders already on the scene. Hoping it hadn't been flushed by all the attention I planned to go the following day. This time there were only three of us looking for the owl. After trudging around for an hour we eventually found it sitting on a deadhead. As you can see in the photo it was wet around the ears following a rain shower. We spent about ten minutes admiring its regal presence, we all took a few frames and left. As we were leaving a birder type person who must have been watching from a distance commented to us on how well we had interacted with the owl and how he wished all photographers behaved in a such an ethical manner. I was a very kind comment that made my day.

Great Gray Owl

A False Alarm

A report of a possible black-chinned hummingbird at Blackie Spit was just the excuse I needed to go birding. Despite the inclement weather it didn't take long for a hummingbird to arrive, alas not the  black-chinned but a beautiful Anna's. With the puzzle solved a quick walk around the park provided enough exercise to get in my first five thousand of my ten thousand step quota, a lot I know but weekends can be quite sedentary due to all the footy on the box.
Anna's Hummingbird


                                        The black-chinned turned out to be an Anna's Hummingbird. 

Brookside B&B Abbotsford 
Lesser Goldfinch
The Langley Field Naturalist's had a day out at Sumas Prairie and on the way back some of us decided to stop off at Chris and Sandy's Brookside B&B in Abbotsford. For some of our party the lesser goldfinch was a lifer.

 South Delta Owls.
The life of a short-eared owl revolves around the hunting of voles. Once they have found a steady supply they will be faithful to a stretch of foreshore or field throughout the winter and return year after year. When the vole population declines so do the number of owls and will often fail to breed. When food is plentiful short-eared owl can lays many as ten eggs, the record being fourteen, only a few fledge. 


Short-eared Owl
Normally anything that attracts my attention usually ends up being photographed. The large discs around the eyes allow the bird to hear noises in the grass and their forward looking eyes act like a spotting scope.

Encroaching development, for now the owls hang on!
Every year acres of Lower Mainland farmland are being turned over to blueberry farms, large greenhouse complexes or other monoculture ventures. A new road to the Delta Coal Port has cut a swath through farmland resulting in the death of countless deer, birds and other smaller mammals and the loss of considerable amount of good bird habitat.


A familiar perch for those who bird at 72nd St.


This image of a short-eared owl hunting in one of a very few untilled fields left around Boundary Bay. The field is rich in yarrow and various grasses which in turn supports a healthy population of Townsend's voles, the main diet of both owls and harriers. An adjacent field has been ploughed and any betting person would put money on more berries, more spraying with toxic chemicals and less habitat resulting in less birds.




Does this close-up (above) tell us anymore more about the owl and its habitat? Look at any Robert Bateman and you'll see acres of habitat and sometimes the subject matter taking up very little space. The picture above gives the viewer very little information about habitat etc but does give a closer view that many may never experience except in a photograph.

                                                                                ****

Male Northern Harrier preening.

During a lull in the action I noticed a spotted towhee eating buds. The towhee is one of those species that has had a name change. When I first came to Canada I knew it as a  rufous-sided towhee. It is also a bird that not many people photograph which is a shame.


Spotted Towhee.

My rule of thumb which has worked for me over the years is to photograph everything and anything that attracts my attention regardless of subject matter. I've often stopped the car or even turned around and driven back to catch a special moment. Some of those pictures led to ongoing assignments and in one case a full time job at a newspaper

(Below) A flock of 5-6 meadowlark have been foraging the fields and foreshore for most of the winter. They never come vey close and these two images have been cropped about 300% but represent what the human eye might see.
A pair of Western Meadowlark at 72nd St 
When a flock flew onto the foreshore two landed on a snag, the other three melted into the long grass.


Riefel Migratory Bird Sanctuary
Female Northern Pintail.
I spent the morning at Reifel enjoying the ducks which are now in full breeding plumage. The sandhill cranes were looking for a nest site and the raucous red-winged blackbirds were staking out nesting areas.

Male Northern Pintail

Walking around the ponds at Reifel I noticed quite a commotion in one of the larger ponds. A number of american wigeon, northern pintail and mallards were flying overhead.
On further investigation I found a photographer feeding the ducks first at one end of the pond and then walking to the other with a bag of seed. With birds flying back and forth the opportunity was too good to miss, besides I wasn't paying for the copious amount bird seed being used! 
Reifel management are not sure they'll let said photographer continue the practice as they feel it can cause disruption just prior to the breeding season. I have to agree, besides how many flying shot does a person need and more importantly how much food can a duck eat!

Brunswick Point
Red-tailed Hawk.
Last year I photographed this same red-tail, easily recognizable with its distinctive beak, it's good to see it surviving and thriving in and around Brunswick Point area.

Tynehead Park

Hawkus Metalicus

Below is a rather unusual hawk I spotted on my walk around Tynehead Regional Park. From a distance its unusual colour had me wondering what type of raptor it might it be. A I approached I expected it to take off but it remained steadfast, rooted to its perch.
Hawkus metallicus
                                            As you can see 'the hawk' wasn't going anywhere!
Rooted to its perch Hawkus Metallicus gives me a steely look.

This is the time of year when birds find a mate as these two American wigeon, bufflehead and cinnamon teal seem to have done.
American wigeon
Ambleside Park
A bufflehead checks out a flock of seagulls flying overhead.
Such a difficult bird to photograph. The eye hidden in a dark thatch of colour while the white breast and flanks are blown out even when shot in diffused light.


Two male buffleheads and females.


Colebrook Rd/New Section
There were two female and one male the day I saw the birds. The area is also a good spot for belted kingfisher, American kestrel and northern shrike.

CinnamonTeal


Maplewood Flats

Ruby-crowned Kinglets.
Often heard before being seen the diminutive ruby-crowned kinglet is sometimes seen with flocks of black-capped chickadee and ruby-crowned kinglets.



Common Redpoll
As I walked around Maplewood flats a flock of six redpolls landed in an alder tree where they were busy feeding on the protein rich catkins. They then flew to a small pond where they bathed for several minutes at a time. The picture below is the only clear view I managed in the twenty minutes I enjoyed being in their presence. A stunning experience all-round.

A common redpoll drying off after bathing
When the redpoll few off it joined about twenty others. Behind those birds another twenty-five redpolls fed in the alders trees. Forty-five redpolls in one session was quite the treat.
                                                                 



      Downtown Birding



I wanted to add a few new birds to my year list so Lonsdale Quay was a perfect place to add both Pigeon Guillemot and Pelagic Cormorant.
Pelagic Cormorant
In the above photograph I wanted to include as much of downtown Vancouver as possible. The juxtaposition of bird and habitat being important in the storytelling process.

Pigeon Guilimots
 Who would have thought that Pigeon Guillemots would be at home in a busy city harbour or just at home on a gulf island outcrop.




                                                                                 ******



 Due to the mild climate there is no shortage of wintering birds in the Lower Mainland. Fifty species in one day is quite common and with a little more effort a hundred or more species can be seen.

"It's never too late to start birding"
John Gordon
Langley/Cloverdale
BC Canada




Wednesday, 21 October 2015

Sparrows, Sandpipers and a Hawk


Oct 20 2015 Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary Sunny T-shirt weather.
The day began at Tsawwassen Ferry Terminal. Bonaparte, Mew, California and Glaucous-winged Gulls were busily preening on the foreshore. Several hundred Double-crested Cormorants were resting on the spit while around them were an equal number of American Wigeon and Northern Pintail. Sharing the shoreline were small flocks of Greater Yellowlegs and Dunlin.
Further out, more than a hundred Horned Grebe were diving for food, beside them a small flock of White-winged Scoters were chasing each other for no apparent reason. As I walked toward the ferry Song Sparrows jumped out of blackberry thickets to check out the camera wielding intruder.
It was time to move on to Reifel where I asked a couple of birders how there morning had been. They had seen a single Sharp-tailed Sandpiper with the flock of Long-billed Dowitchers. Hopefully it would be closer than the one I had seen earlier in the year.

Fortunately it was, sleeping alongside a pair of Long-billed Dowitchers.
Safety in numbers. A Sharp-tailed Sandpiper with Long-billed Dowitchers.

The sharpie was sleeping. I didn't have to wait long though as a Rough-legged Hawk spooked the flock.

Rough-legged Hawk
They flew around the pond returning back to their original roosting spot. The hawk was more intent on chasing larger prey and made it's way out to where thousands of Snow Geese and ducks were feeding on Spanish Banks. Eventually the Sharp-tailed Sandpiper returned.

Sharp-tailed Sandpiper. A rare visitor from Asia with perhaps less than half a dozen recorded each year.

On my way out of the sanctuary and across from the warming hut I noticed a sparrow that was a little different than the others, it seemed more skittish. I waited for it to come back out to forage. Anyway it turned out to be a gorgeous White-throated Sparrow which was feeding with a resident flock of European House Sparrows.
White-throated Sparrow on fence with nice clean background. 

A White-throated Sparrow forages amongst with autumn leaves. Way more storytelling than the previous picture. 

On my way home I dropped into 72nd Ave and found this Lincoln's Sparrow, a real nice way to close out another beautiful day in paradise.


Lincoln's Sparrow.
This shot with the Nikon 200mm-500mm and D7100.

 Some images from Oct 13/15 Reifel.
As an afterthought I include the two images from the same flock of Long-billed Dowitchers taken a few days earlier than the sandpiper images above. Pic#1 shows a Dunlin and Long-billed Dowitcher and the other a Pectoral Sandpiper with same flock of LBD.
Pix #1 Long-billed Dowitcher and Dunlin.

Pectoral Sandpiper with Long-billed Sandpiper (rear) and Short-billed Sandpiper.

Pectoral Sandpiper bathing with Long-billed Dowitchers.
Just thought it's interesting how the Long and Short-billed Dowitcher flock plus a few Greater Yellowlegs stay put and other sandpipers seem to come and go on a regular basis. Always worth a good look Eh!



"It's never too late to start birding"
John Gordon
Langley/Cloverdale
BC Canada











Thursday, 24 September 2015

Great Egret: Finally!

Sept 22 2015 Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary Sunny 14c


Finally, after five attempts I now have some decent shots the Great Egret. The elusive wader had been hanging around the Lower Mainland for the last month or so. The bird had lots of us birders running around and there are still many hoping for a first sighting. Egrets are not often seen here, I believe the last sighting in the Lower Mainland was 2013 at Grant Narrows.
Great Egret

Apart from one distant view through a scope I had been chasing the egret for two weeks without much luck. Finally I just happened to be in the right place at the right time. I had just photographed the Sharp-tailed Sandpiper and Sora in the outer ponds at Reifel. The sharpie was a 2015 year bird for me and so after a long day I had decided to go home. On my way out to the car a cluster of photographers were all pointing their lenses in the same direction which usually means only one thing, the egret was back in Fuller's Slough. It was at first a distant speck some 400 metres away. I decided to stay to see if the bird would move. There were a few birders who I knew so the time passed quickly. We whittled away the time comparing lenses, a peculiarly male trait when after about an hour of waiting the egret suddenly flew closer, it was still a speck but a much larger speck. None of us had a Hubble telescope so we waited and waited until for whatever reason the egret decided to fly directly at us. I'm glad I stayed.
Great Egret Nikon D300s Nikon 500 F4 1/2000 F8
I shot this with a tripod mounted Nikon 500mm F4 on a D300s. I had just packed away the new Nikon 200mm-500mm F5.6 which I had been test driving earlier in the day. I would have loved to have had the zoom close at hand as the bird came closer and I couldn't get  all of the bird in as it flew over and around us. The lady next to me with a 80mm-200mm zoom probably has even better shots, hell, even someone with a point and shoot would have worked. Don't get me wrong I am not disappointed with these results after all the effort and time I had put in the bird.
When I got home and checked the files in Lightroom I am glad I had underexposed the shot by a stop and half as it reveals good detail in the feathers. The F8 F stop gave me good depth of field and 1/2000 sec shutter speed froze the action.

"It's never too late to start birding"
John Gordon
Langley/Cloverdale
BC Canada




Sunday, 12 April 2015

Various Places/Various Birds



April 10/15 Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary/Richmond Nature Park/Boundary Bay.



Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary

On arriving at Reifel we were saddened to hear the Sandhill Crane had lost both eggs. Whether they had been predated or otherwise we couldn't confirm, only that the birds had abandoned their nest. Sanctuary manager Katherine mentioned they might have another attempt to lay depending how amorous they feel.
The goal was to find a pair of Swamp Sparrows which may to may not be breeding in the Reifel's reed beds. Normally the species heads into the interior to breed so it will be interesting to see what unfolds. I almost got a clear shot but there's always another day. 
Swamp Sparrow (Melospiza georgiana)


On the way out of the sanctuary the Harris Sparrow was hanging around with the Golden-crowned Sparrows.
It's looking a bit rough as it changes into adult plumage.
Harris Sparrow (Zenotrichia querula)
Richmond Nature Park
I just felt like going to photograph some hummingbirds. The nature park has both Rufous and Anna's Hummingbirds and numerous feeders.
Anna's Hummingbird (Calypte anna)
Juvenile I think?


 Male Rufous Hummingbird (Selasphorus rufus)

Next up was the surprise arrival of a flock of Red Crossbill. They came in so quickly for a drink at a small pond that I ended up underexposing the few shots I did manage to fire off. The result grainy pix.



Male Red Crossbill (Loxia curvirosta)




Juvenile males?

Juvenile female Red Crossbill.
After all the excitement that lasted just a few minutes, it was back to the other birds where a number of species were sharing a feeder with a Douglas Squirrel.

Douglas Squirrel (Tamiasciurus douglasii)


 Male Purple Finch ( Carpodacus purpureus)

Male House Finch (Carpodacus mexicanus)


Female Downy Woodpecker (Picoides pubescens)
Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias)


I photographed this Great Blue Heron while waiting for the Golden Eagle. If I remember right I shot it handheld with the 500mm F4 because I had just arrived and hadn't put up my tripod.

Below is a Bald Eagle shot from the same spot but this time on a tripod. I have dozens of Bald Eagle shots but this one has a little more expression in the bird's face than most.


Bald Eagle (Haliaeetus leucocephalus)
About a month ago Boundary Bay was inundated with Bald Eagles. From one spot alone a group of us counted 180 birds wheeling around in the thermals. As the weather warms the eagles slowly disperse and us birders turn our attentions to warblers, terns and shorebirds. Some of us will head to the Interior for desert and alpine species and others for the prairies to bird for grassland species.  Wherever your birding takes you I wish you the best of luck and good birding.


"It's never too late to start birding"

John Gordon
Langley/Cloverdale
BC Canada