Show your Bird Portraits

Malte_P said:
Krob78 said:
Awesome images in this series, Malte! Congrats, they are really beautiful! What bird is this? The woodpecker I know, but I'm not familar with this other bird. Looks like a cross between some sort of Titmouse and a Warbler and a Blue Jay! So pretty! Love the line down the breast too, great images!

i have searched the english name:

wiki:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Tit

the blue tit is as numerous as sparrows here in germany. ;)
and they are the first at the feeding station.. 10-20 seconds after they visit the feeding station the sparrows arrive.

when they fly away they are the first to come back short after them the sparrows... the bue tit is a cheeky little bird.
that´s what i learned the past 2 days.

hell im really a bird noob, i have so much to learn about their behavior. :)
The blue tit (along with the several other European tit species) are in the same family (Paridae) as the titmouse and chickadee. The Latin name used to be Parus caeruleus, but they've reclassified it as Cyanistes caeruleus. The coal tit looks very similar to a chickadee.


Coal Tit on Pine by Kernuak (avalonlightphotoart.co.uk), on Flickr

Then you have the great tit.


Great Tit in a Tree by Kernuak (avalonlightphotoart.co.uk), on Flickr

My favourite is probably the crested tit, probably because of the rarity, but I only have a single very distant shot from several years ago. I haven't even seen the equally rare bearded tit, unless you count a speck through binoculars, where I wouldn't have been able to ID it without someone else telling me it was there.
 
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Rare appearance of a juvenile Yellow-crowned Night Heron at Bolsa Chica Ecological Reserve, Huntington Beach, CA. Taken with 60D + EF 100-400mm, at 400mm, f/5.6, 1/500 sec and 150 ISO.
 

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Kernuak said:
Malte_P said:
Krob78 said:
Awesome images in this series, Malte! Congrats, they are really beautiful! What bird is this? The woodpecker I know, but I'm not familar with this other bird. Looks like a cross between some sort of Titmouse and a Warbler and a Blue Jay! So pretty! Love the line down the breast too, great images!

i have searched the english name:

wiki:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Tit

the blue tit is as numerous as sparrows here in germany. ;)
and they are the first at the feeding station.. 10-20 seconds after they visit the feeding station the sparrows arrive.

when they fly away they are the first to come back short after them the sparrows... the bue tit is a cheeky little bird.
that´s what i learned the past 2 days.

hell im really a bird noob, i have so much to learn about their behavior. :)
The blue tit (along with the several other European tit species) are in the same family (Paridae) as the titmouse and chickadee. The Latin name used to be Parus caeruleus, but they've reclassified it as Cyanistes caeruleus. The coal tit looks very similar to a chickadee.


Coal Tit on Pine by Kernuak (avalonlightphotoart.co.uk), on Flickr

Then you have the great tit.


Great Tit in a Tree by Kernuak (avalonlightphotoart.co.uk), on Flickr

My favourite is probably the crested tit, probably because of the rarity, but I only have a single very distant shot from several years ago. I haven't even seen the equally rare bearded tit, unless you count a speck through binoculars, where I wouldn't have been able to ID it without someone else telling me it was there.
Great info! Thanks... :)
 
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revup67 said:
LSV - I didn't think we had any Yellow Crowned Night Herons here - though I did note you mention "rare". According to whatbird.com this bird doesn't in southern Cal. http://identify.whatbird.com/obj/53/_/Yellow-crowned_Night-Heron.aspx. Was there any mention as to what the Yellow heron was doing in this part? Fascinating and good eye !

You know birds -- the last visit to the OC was 35 years ago! It was an adult that time in 1977. San Diego County has some coming over from Mexico from time to time. I'd learned of this visitor from our local (very excited) birders. Looks like he has become a permanent resident.
 
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rpt said:
LSV said:
Yellow-crowned Night Heron visits the OC for the fine-dining locally.
Wow! Great timing! I bet that bite hurt the bird. Were you already on to the bird or did its scream alert you?
Just dumb luck that I caught the epic struggle from beginning to end, 3-4 minutes. That photo showed the turning point after the bird escaped from the crab's claws and
got enough leverage to chomp the crab into 2 pieces. Here's the Victor with the spoils.
 

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Loving the wide variety and quality of shots!!

Long time browser but first time poster. (Forgive me if I post this incorrectly P )

Here are a couple of my prized snaps this past summer:

Black Hills American Dipper - apparently a rather rare little critter in the Hills. This little guy was quite calm and let me snap for 5 minutes before flitting off to his next engagement.

Regards,

kmc
 

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Never seen one of these before--took an hour just to get this shot as this bird is a bit peculiar. Lands on a branch for 1-2 seconds then flys to another branch for 1-2 then hides in the scrub brush. After an hour I began to give up. As I walked down a steep dirt downgrade I caught one on a branch for about 5 seconds and pulled this off..his name..a Spotted Towee..where? Modjeska Canyon..southern Cal.


Spotted Towee by Revup67, on Flickr
 
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revup67 said:
Never seen one of these before--took an hour just to get this shot as this bird is a bit peculiar. Lands on a branch for 1-2 seconds then flys to another branch for 1-2 then hides in the scrub brush. After an hour I began to give up. As I walked down a steep dirt downgrade I caught one on a branch for about 5 seconds and pulled this off..his name..a Spotted Towee..where? Modjeska Canyon..southern Cal.


Spotted Towee by Revup67, on Flickr
Great Job Rev! There are a lot of quarry that seem to be difficult to capture... You were lucky to get the image you did!
 
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LSV said:
rpt said:
LSV said:
Yellow-crowned Night Heron visits the OC for the fine-dining locally.
Wow! Great timing! I bet that bite hurt the bird. Were you already on to the bird or did its scream alert you?
Just dumb luck that I caught the epic struggle from beginning to end, 3-4 minutes. That photo showed the turning point after the bird escaped from the crab's claws and
got enough leverage to chomp the crab into 2 pieces. Here's the Victor with the spoils.
Wow! That is something! You must have shot a pile of photos.
 
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Sporgon,

Nice shot but I'd be tempted to airbrush out the one at the back and the one on the far right - I think that would "tighten-up" the compositon. Ah, it's easy to critique after the image is taken ;)

Guy.
 
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Thanks 96Brigadier for your kind praise. When I took this picture I felt there was something there but it didn't hit the spot until I produced it in B&W.

Thanks for your constructive comments Guy, funnily enough I felt the composition could be improved, and I have attached the version that's on our website as a 2X1. All our pictures are either 1X2 or 1X2.5.
 

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