Dear Jack,
Thanks so much for reviving the memories of my last trip to CR! Here is a 1 minute video of how I was greeted upon arriving at the lodge near PN de los Quetzales. Makes me smile every time I play it, excellent for cheering up.
Didn't manage to embed it here, unfortunately...
Thanks as always. Hummers were all over but not always that easy to catch in flight. I wasn't around feeders, which would have made a big difference. Scintilant Hummingbird.
Jack
Scintilant Hummingbird.
Nice shots AlanIt was my birthday two days ago, a most beautiful spring day, about 23 oC, and I was serenaded by small songbirds in my garden. I now have a chiffchaff that starts the dawn chorus accompanied by various tits and other birds who are clearly heard but not seen in the high trees and bushes. But, I caught this pair with the 5DSR at 560mm. Not the greatest of shots but they are mementos.
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Nice one Joseph, I really like this.Nest-building...spring has sprung.
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! Well, I prefer duck...Hey Wiebe, match this one from Costa Rica. A (not) very raree bird indeed. And tasty too.
Jack
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And I'm ready to sleep - long day today. I promise I will try tomorrow (not sure I can succeed!) Did you say " disguise" - that is perfect one, any time I fail to identify a bird I'm going to use it (no "TM" next to your original posting !) Nice photo BTW and that is what makes the music! (Hey, is it a branch of Plumeria there?)I'm stumped and have one guess but I'll wait for feedback. I think it's wearing a disguise.
Jack
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This looks like what we called Hungarian partridge??I didn't have the opportunity to shoot in the weekend. Instead I took a day off Tuesday to make a chaperone for friends visiting from New York. It was fun but concerning the birds - no much hopes. At the very end of a round trip in botanical garden we noticed two Gray Francolins running in front of us. Their track was predictable and I just went forward to "freeze" in front of the place where they were expected to appear (under the bushes). After that my "hunting dogs" (I mean my friends) started approaching the bushes where the birds were hiding. I was waiting ~5-7 minutes ("frozen"!} and nothing. My friends (not birders but in this case it was helpful) were asking (loudly!): did you got them? And I just noticed some movement ~10 meters in front of me! One of the birds was there! And very confident in the low light under that canopy! I got some shots but when I tried to change the angle it just went running (and the second bird after it)!
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This looks like what we called Hungarian partridge??
No! It isn't it! It is why I prefer for some birds to apply the scientific names too... Compare Perdix perdix (the "Hungarian") against "Francolinus pondicerianus " (it comes from India and around)! On the Internet you can find a lot of them! It is easy to find differences between these two if you look carefully!
Thanks guys. There were some in certain areas that were so plentiful that it was just a matter of time that one would pause for a shot. The flowers you see were the big attraction and they were like hedges so no shortage of subjects. Black-bellied Hummingbird (I think).
Here is the female of the Red-legged Honeycreeper. I believe I posted the black/purple male earlier.
I'm stumped and have one guess but I'll wait for feedback. I think it's wearing a disguise.
Jack