Showing posts with label Yellow-throated Warbler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yellow-throated Warbler. Show all posts

Saturday, February 23, 2013

You took a wrong turn at the Arctic

As Nick wrote in an earlier post, Georgia has been having some crazy rare birds visiting us. And we have been very fortunate that many of them have not been very far of a drive. Our latest, and probably greatest, sightings have been a Northern Lapwing, a rare visitor from Europe, and a Snowy Owl, a rare visitor from the tundra.

Northern Lapwing 

 (All photos here of the Northern Lapwing are iPhonescoped).

A graduate student was taking a group of undergraduate students out on a field trip to some farmland out in Statesboro to look for some shorebirds that might hang out in the grasses and mud. One of the undergrads pointed out that one bird especially stuck out as being quite different than the others, and when the graduate student got a good look at it, she knew she had something special.

Frontal view of his thick, black breast band



Here, in a random farm in a random town in Georgia, appeared a super rare Northern Lapwing. This just goes to show that there is no telling when and where something extraordinary will show up.

Enjoying other beautiful birds while viewing the Northern Lapwing, such as this lovely Yellow-throated Warbler


Pine Warbler looking tough on the barbed wire

iPhonescoped photo of an American Pipit. Several of them were in the same field as the Lap

And speaking of extraordinary… The Snowy Owl. I had started to feel left out when it seemed like EVERYONE was seeing a Snowy Owl last winter when the super breeding season pushed owls beyond their northern territories. And after we dipped on the Snowy Owl on St. Simons this past December, I was feeling like I had missed my chance.

Snowy Owl peeking up from his slumber 


Sleepy Snowy

But then here came along a Snowy Owl practically at our back door on Tybee Island. And he’s been sticking around the past couple of weeks. Birders from near and far are flocking to see him (pun intended). Just about everybody, birders and nonbirders alike, are excited to see this awesomely amazing bird. Everybody loves an owl! The only ones who aren’t so happy are the fired up crows and the shorebirds that the Snowy has been picking off for dinner.

A wink ;) and a smile


Crows harassing the Snowy Owl

The crows are not afraid to get close to the Snowy Owl with their raucousness

What’s funny is that about a week before we had seen him, I had raised the question to Nick, “What was the best bird you saw last year?” Of course, we both agreed that it was the Black-headed Gull we found. But I threw in a side note that it would have been a toss up if we had found the Snowy Owl. 

The only photo of the Snowy Owl here that was not iPhonescoped. Pretty nice lighting in those awesome wings, if I do say so myself. =)


And whataya know? The Snowy Owl decided to grace us with his presence and make it a super difficult game of “What has been the best bird we have seen this year?” With all these rarities practically falling at our feet, it’s definitely hard to choose. For the sheer rarity, I would say the Northern Lapwing. For sheer majestic beauty, I would say the Snowy Owl. But luckily I’m not a real judge in a real contest. They’re all wonderful to me! 



Saturday, December 11, 2010

Featured Feathered Friend - Yellow-throated Warbler

This week's Featured Feathered Friend is extra special! First the back story. While taking a stroll through Daggerwing Nature Center in early October 2009, we saw this little Yellow-throated Warbler hopping around a cabbage palm (Florida's state tree) just after a light rain shower. You may notice his damp little throat and belly feathers. 

This is one of my favorite warblers. Not only are they beautifully colored, but they always seem to be extra friendly and willing to come close to you to see what's going on. As with this one, he was flitting about on this cabbage palm 2 feet in front of us, and he was very willing to pose for pictures. 

And this picture is extra special because he is my first print that I made for someone other than myself. Nick and I are members of the local chapter of the National Audubon Society. We recently had our December meeting with a potluck and "Chinese raffle." I thought it would be nice to donate a print to help raise money, and this picture was the chosen one. The elderly man who won the raffle for the print had snuck in tickets without his wife knowing because he knew how much she loved Yellow-throated Warblers. He picked up the item and brought it to her and she was very excited! And I was excited that she was so excited. She not only oooh-ed and aaaah-ed over it, but she also asked if I went to Dreyfoos, a local school of the arts. I was flattered and said no, I'm just an amateur. =) I was so happy that one of my prints could bring a little joy to someone else, and I'm so excited to have my print hung up in a stranger's home.