Tag Archives: birding

May Birding – Best time of the year

Buff-breasted Sandpiper

A Buff-breasted Sandpiper, a rare "shorebird" that you normally don't find along the shoreline as they migrate through. Today was the exception to the rule though, as a flock was found on the edge of a shallow wetland.

May is such a wonderful time.  After a long South Dakota winter, May brings warm temperatures and green landscapes.  From a birding perspective, after a winter of very little species diversity, no other time of year can match the number and variety of species that you can see in a given day.  Shorebirds are migrating through the interior of the country, and a trip to a mudflat or shallow water area can easily yield a dozen or more shorebird species.  In eastern South Dakota where I live, we can have truly incredibly warbler migrations, with the possibility to see 20+ warbler species in a day.  The summer breeding birds also have all arrived by the end of the month, with Indigo Buntings, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, Baltimore Orioles, Scarlet Tanagers, and more bringing a very welcome splash of color after a winter dominated by the cute, but gray/black/white Dark-eyed Junco.

Ovenbird

It's amazing how such a small bird as an Ovenbird can make such a loud noise! This time of year, their loud crescendo songs can be heard throughout Newton Hills State Park.

I always try to save some vacation days and go out on all day birding trips in May.  I went yesterday, and had a truly wonderful day.  The day started with a trip to Newton Hills State Park, about 30 miles south of Sioux Falls.  Newton Hills is a relative rarity for South Dakota habitats, a true “eastern” deciduous forest.  As such, it often holds eastern U.S. forest species that you’re unlikely to find anywhere else in South Dakota. It didn’t take long to hear singing Blue-winged Warblers, a species on the edge of its range in South Dakota.  Warbler numbers weren’t all that high compared to what they can be, but there was a nice mix.  American Redstarts were relatively common, and Yellow Warblers were everywhere.  One of my personal favorites, Ovenbirds, are quite common in Newton Hills and they were certainly doing their best to announce the arrival of spring, with their distinctive, loud songs.  Other warblers included Blackpoll Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, Wilson’s Warbler, Tennessee Warbler, and Northern Waterthrush.

Hudsonian Godwit

One of the most beautiful shorebirds that migrates through the state, a male Hudsonian Godwit.

It was also nice to see all the summer “regulars” at Newton Hills.  Scarlet Tanagers, Rose-breasted Grosbeaks, Indigo Buntings, singing Wood Thrush, Red-eyed and Yellow-throated Vireo…all welcome for both the views and for their songs.

After Newton Hills, I headed up towards the Lake Thompson area in Kingsbury county, looking for waterbirds.  Lake Thompson never disappoints in the spring.  It’s so large, and no matter the water levels for a given year, you’ll always find mudflats and shallow waters that hold shorebirds, as well as deeper water for other birds.  The highlight was a Little Blue Heron, a bird more often thought of as a bird of the southeastern United States. It was hanging out with a group of about a dozen Snowy Egrets, and is only the 2nd Little Blue Heron I’ve ever seen in the state.  Another highlight were a group of at least 18 Buff-breasted Sandpipers.  They are a pretty rare migrant to begin with and are always a welcome sight, but it’s not often you see a large group of them.  They’re normally found in short-grass areas, but at least yesterday, this flock was acting like other “shorebirds”, hanging around the edge of a shallow-water lake.

Little Blue Heron

A bird you associate more with the Gulf Coast than you do South Dakota, this is only the 2nd Little Blue Heron I've ever seen in the state.

On the grasslands and fence lines, both Eastern and Western Kingbirds had returned, while Bobolinks were seen, and heard, singing their unique, metallic/clinky songs.

Wonderful day, both for the variety of birds seen, from forests, to grasslands, to wetlands, but also for the surprise of seeing some rarities for the state.  Gotta love May birding in South Dakota!

New – Bird Quizzes

Bird Quizzes

Check out the new bird quizzes, testing your knowledge of bird identification, geographic range, or scientific names.

It’s been a very long time since I’ve updated some of the content on my main website. One feature I have had on my site are bird identification quizzes, which hadn’t been updated in about 6 years.  I took the old quizzes down and have been putting up brand new, improved quizzes.

Bird Quizzes – South Dakota Birds and Birding

I’m up to 10 different quizzes and will continually be adding more, including several more in the next few days.  Each quiz is 20 questions, multiple choice, with 6 possible answers for you to choose from.  Unlike the previous quizzes, which were all photo quizzes, I have three different quiz categories:

1 – Photo identification – 20 bird photographs that you have to identify, under varying degrees of difficulty.

2 – Range maps – 20 maps showing the geographic and seasonal range for species.  With just the range map and one text clue, you need to guess the depicted species.

3 – Scientific names – For the real hardcore bird nut, these are 20 questions, where you’re provided the scientific name and one clue, and you must guess the species.

As I said, I’ll be adding more quizzes shortly.  If you have any quiz ideas you’d like to see, either a category for an existing photo, range map, or scientific name quiz, or even a completely new type of quiz, drop me a line and I’ll see if I can get a new custom quiz created.

Woo-hoo! Another New Yard Bird! Sharp-shinned Hawk

Sharp-shinned Hawk - Accipiter striatus

Another new yard bird! A Sharp-shinned Hawk on my fence, right after he finished off eating another of my yard birds.

Woo-hoo!  I just finish posting about one new yard bird, go look at my feeders, and I see another new yard bird!  Except this time, the new yard bird was eating one of my other birds!  This is a Sharp-shinned Hawk.  They’re pretty well known for targeting birds that come to feeders.  Smart fellows.  There have been multiple times where I’ve been watching feeders or small groups of birds, and one of these guys has swooped in and caught one of the.

Very cool birds!  I’m glad my wife wasn’t around to see the carnage though…don’t think she’d have appreciated the Sharp-shinned Hawk like I did.

New Yard Bird! Common Redpoll

Common Redpoll - Carduelis flammea

A new yard bird this morning...a Common Redpoll.

A nice surprise this morning…a new “yard bird”!  It’s been an outstanding winter for Common Redpolls, a northern species that moves southward in some winters.  I’ve only seen them on rare occasions in South Dakota, and had never had one in my yard.  Despite everyone else seemingly having them around this winter, they were avoiding my yard.  It was a nice surprise this morning to wake up, come downstairs, and find three of these guys around my feeders.

Nice way to start the day!!

2013 Big Year Underway! Kind of…

Snowy Owl

A nice start to a "Photo Big Year", getting a Snowy Owl on January 1st! Click for a larger view.

I’ve never been a “lister”.  I’ve never been one of those birders whose obsession is their life list, their state list, their yard list, etc.  If you tell me a bird species, I can tell you whether I’ve seen it before, if I’ve photographed it, and where.  But I have no idea what my species “count” is, either for sight or photographs.

For background…in 2012, I did much less birding than I’ve done since I started birding in 2000.  Part of it was time and other issues, but a lot too is that it’s hard to get motivated to go out and take photos of the same species that I already have 100 photos of.  I did miss getting out in 2012 though, so have vowed 2013 would be different.  For motivation?  I am now starting a ‘Big Year’!! 

 For many outside the birding community, the term “Big Year” may likely bring to mind the recent movie with Steve Martin, Jack Black, and Owen Wilson, where 3 obsessed birders try to set the record for most North American bird species seen in one year.  That’s the general idea for me too, but modified significantly!  First of all, I’m calling it a “(Not so) Big Year”.  I’m not going nuts.  I’m not going to travel to all corners of the country, or even in South Dakota.  Secondly, it’s a “Photo” big year.  I simply plan to get out and see how many different bird species I can photograph in South Dakota in 2013, without turning it into an obsessive quest, ala what was seen in The Big Year movie.

I already can see it’s going to be fun!  Instead of watching college football all day on New Year’s, I instead went birding on the grasslands in the central part of the state.  While I normally would ignore most species that I already have plenty of photographs for, I found myself actually CHASING some common birds to try to get a 2013 photo.  Last year, I don’t think I would have thought twice about the scads of Ring-necked Pheasants, Horned Larks, or Lapland Longspurs I came across, but yesterday, it was fun trying to get a documented 2013 photo for even the “common” species.

A good start to the year!  The highlight was coming across a Snowy Owl towards the end of the day, definitely a nice one to get a photo of for a “Photo big year”.  I also managed photos of a Townsend’s Solitaire, a pretty uncommon site around here, and most of the  “winter” raptors that are found in the central part of the state at this time of year.  We’ll see where it takes me, and how many different species I can photograph this year!  Here’s the page where I’ll keep things updated…

The 2013 (Not So) Big (Photo) Year

Bird apps for your new X-mas toys

National Geographic Birds

One of the apps I bought for my new iPhone and iPad...National Geographic Birds. There certainly are a lot of great apps out there for birders.

I’m pretty savvy around a PC, but other than that and an iPod, I haven’t been too tech heavy.  So much for that, after this Christmas.  I have my first smartphone, with a new iPhone 5.  And, my wife got me a new iPad for Christmas as well.  So I did what most people did this Christmas as soon as they got their new toys…looked for bird apps!!

OK, so maybe not everybody looks for bird apps, but there are some nice ones out there for casual or serious birders.  Even on my old iPod, I had “BirdTunes”.  I can identify pretty much anything here by sight, but I’m not too great at bird song.  Bird Tunes is a wonderful app to have in the field, as it has multiple songs for pretty much every bird you’d expect to find in North America. 

BirdTunes does have a simple photo for each species, but no real information other than songs, no identification characteristics, or no range map.  One of the first apps I got for my new toys was iBird Pro.  It’s $14.99, so not one of the cheap $0.99 apps you find on iTunes, but it’s a hefty program with a lot of content.  One thing I immediately liked about it is that it has both artwork of birds, as well as numerous photos (usually multiple photos per species). I know some birders like the artwork-type presentation in some bird guides, and others like photos, so it was nice to see an app with both.  iBird Pro also has nice range maps, “ecology” information, calls and songs, and “similar” birds.  It doesn’t have the number of calls and songs as BirdTunes, but it certainly blows BirdTunes away for other content.

One more that I bought was National Geographic Birds: Field Guide to North America.  I myself do like the artwork-type of presentation that’s provided in a National Geographic or Sibley’s guide, so appreciate the bird images provided with this app.  Information is pretty extensive, as they certainly cover just about any bird you’d ever encounter in North America, including the extreme rarities.  A couple of features I like about this software is that by itself without any additional add-ins, you can easily compile lists.  I’m not much of a lister, but I know what I’ve seen, so quickly went through and created my own life list, a “South Dakota” list, and a “Yard” list.  Fun.  It also has bird quizzes, which is a VERY nice addition.  My only problem…there are 10 quizzes with 10 questions each, and the quizzes are all static.  I’d love an app someday where quizzes are more dynamic and the range of questions is a lot larger.  It was still a nice addition however.

That’s what I’ve gotten so far.  I know there are  alot of other apps out there…any thoughts on the ones you like?

An afternoon in the Everglades

Wood Stork

Wood Stork feeding in the shallows in Big Cypress National Reserve in Florida.

I had a work trip to southern Florida last week, somewhere I’ve never been.  I DESPERATELY wanted to get out and do a bit of birding. Specifically, I wanted to see the Everglades.  In a busy week of being gone, I found several hours one afternoon to get away and explore the Everglades a bit.

Roseate Spoonbill

Roseate Spoonbill, taken in the Everglades

What a blast!  I’m always amazed at how some birding trips turn into seemingly lifeless trips, where few birds are seen or photographed.  At other times and places, birds can be incredibly abundant.  It seems like I get 90% of my photos in about 10% of my birding efforts, and this was one of those ultra-productive times. Birds were everywhere!  Given that I’d never been in the area before, I ended up picking up photos of 10 species I didn’t have before…pretty darn good for a few hours of birding, when I’ve been taking photos of birds for about 12 years now.

Red-shouldered Hawk

Red-shouldered Hawk from the Everglades. I moved to within 10 feet of him at one stage, and he basically ignored me.

The Everglades were great. Some mentioned to try Shark Valley, an area on the northern edge of the Everglades that was relatively close to where I was staying.  It wasn’t yet the “prime” time of year for Shark Valley, I was told, as bird really would start to concentrate in another month or so.  Despite that, there were water birds galore.  White Ibis, Little Blue Heron, Anhinga, Great Blue Heron, Great Egret, and more.  The main path at Shark Valley is a 15-mile loop, with a 7-mile long canal of water along the west side of one half of the loop.  After only about an hour of walking along that path, I picked up several new species, and many great photos.  But, given it was my one afternoon to get out, I didn’t linger, and wanted to look around at other nearby locations.

Short-tailed Hawk

There are perhaps only 500 Short-tailed Hawks in the U.S. They're a bird of the tropics, and in the U.S. they are only found in southern Florida. I was thrilled to see one, and get a (somewhat less than stellar) photo of one.

Someone at Shark Valley had mentioned a couple of roads in the Big Cypress National Reserve that were just 10 miles or so west of Shark Valley.  I next went to Loop Road in the reserve, a 22-mile loop that goes through the Big Cypress National Reserve, with cypress swamp on both sides of the road.  What an INCREDIBLE birding location!   The cypress swamp was pressed up against the road on both sides in most locations, making photography or spotting birds very difficult.  However, there were many culverts and mini bridges, in some places, bridges spaced every 100 yards or so.  On either side of the road near the mini-bridges were little openings in the cypress swamp.  You’d drive through thick forest, come up on one of these openings, and it was like a series of little dioramas.  You never knew what the next little opening might have!  It seemed like EVERY opening had some birds (or alligators!) hanging out.  There were many birds at Shark Valley in the Everglades, but the number of birds there was dwarfed by what I saw in the Big Cypress National Reserve.  Wood Storks were downright common (another new species!), along with more of the wading bird species that were seen at Shark Valley.  Red-shouldered Hawks were hanging out by the road in a few locations, and were incredibly tame, allowing very close photos.  In the hour and a half I drove through the 22-mile loop, I ended up taking almost 500 photos!  It was one of the most productive photography times I’ve ever had.

Anhinga

One of the more common sights in both the Everglades and in Big Cypress...an Anhinga. Another lifer for me, since I've spent very little time in the Southeast since I started birding.

As the clock hit 4:00 and the sunlight started to fade, I tried one more road in the Big Cypress National Reserve, and if anything, this road on the north side of Highway 41 had even more birds than did the Loup Road.  An absolutely fabulous way to end a great day of birding, seeing scores of wading birds and other birds flying in to their nighttime roosts.

It’s definitely a place I want to get back to some day, and spend more than just a few hours!

Free 2013 Bird Calendar

2013 Bird CalendarAs I do every year, I have made a free, downloadable and printable bird calendar for the coming year.  Each month has a different bird photo, all taken from within the state of South Dakota.  You can download each month individually and print them for your own personal use.  Each is a PDF file that should be set up to print at standard letter size.

Click below to take you to the calendar page.  Have a nice Thanksgiving!!

http://sdakotabirds.com/calendar_main.htm

Husker Football, And Woodpeckers

Pileated Woodpecker - By Terry Sohl

Great day, first getting photos of this Pileated Woodpecker, and then watching the other "Big Red" get a win against the Michigan Wolverines.

A wonderful day yesterday, on multiple fronts!   As with any football Saturday where the Huskers are playing at home, thousands make the trek to Lincoln for the game.  But I bet there are very few that made it a combined football/birding day, like I did!

I left yesterday morning and stopped at the DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge on the Nebraska/Iowa border.  It’s a beautiful, heavily wooded area along the Missouri River with a series of sloughs and ponds along the river, as well as with some large open grassy and weedy areas.  From a birding standpoint, it’s known for large numbers of waterfowl that utilize it in migration, often including thousands of Snow Geese.  Given the diversity of habitats there though, it’s a very good birding destination for all sorts of species.

I really didn’t have any particular “target” species in mind yesterday, but was thrilled to death when I came across a big Pileated Woodpecker, foraging low in the forest canopy, right after I got to the NWR.  Pileated Woodpeckers are the largest remaining woodpecker in North America…if you believe the Ivory-billed Woodpecker is extinct (I don’t).  In South Dakota, there are tiny numbers of Pileated Woodpeckers in the northeast part of the state, and there are sightings every once in a great while in my part of the state in the southeast, but I’ve never seen one in South Dakota.  Not only did I get great looks at this bird, but I was able to get a series of very nice, close photographs.  Great way to spend a chilly fall morning!

Then the game!  Nebraska!  The mighty Michigan Wolverines, the team with the most wins in the history of college football!  At night!  It was a wonderful, big-time college atmosphere, and a great game for a Husker fan.  Very nice to see Nebraska play well against a big-time opponent.

Nebraska beating Michigan, AND a “life” photo bird!  Great day overall!

Birding Maine

Black-throated Blue Warbler

Black-throated Blue Warbler

Vacation is supposed to be for relaxing, catching up on sleep, and taking a break.  However, a lot of times when I come back from vacation, I’m more tired than before I left.  This is due to my (questionable?) practice of getting up at dawn every day and going out birding before my wife and son get up.  I don’t want to spend family time birding, so doing it in the mornings before they’re ready to go for the day is one way to get my birding in, and not disrupt the family schedule.

Northern Parula

Northern Parula

One reason I do it is that there are usually a new mix of birds wherever we vacation, with the opportunity to see (and photograph) birds that I just don’t have an opportunity to see here in South Dakota.  One group of birds that I have trouble photographing are warblers.  There’s an amazing variety of warbler species, with 40 or so that have been seen in South Dakota. However, the majority of these are just migrants through the state, or rare vagrants.  I’ve SEEN nearly all the warbler species that come through the state, but it’s typically a case of seeing individual birds of a given species.  It’s one thing to go out and try to photograph a bird that’s common in a given region…you’ll have multiple opportunities and multiple birds to try to photograph. It’s quite another task to try to get a photograph of the ONE Black-throated Green Warbler that you see during a given spring migration.

Black-throated Green Warbler

Black-throated Green Warbler

It also doesn’t help that warblers in general are active little buggers!!  The day I see a warbler just sitting still in a tree is the day I can die a happy man.  But NOOOOOOO….warblers are never that cooperative, they’re always flitting about and moving through the vegetation while they’re foraging.  Several warbler species also tend to spend most of their time high up in a forest canopy, making them even more difficult to photograph.

Blackburnian Warbler

Blackburnian Warbler

We vacationed on the coast of Maine, northeast of Acadia National Park.  Many of the “wood warblers” that are migrants or vagrants here breed in the forests of Maine, so warblers were going to be my primary focus during this trip.  I wasn’t disappointed in the number or variety of warblers seen during my morning excursions!!  From the very first morning there, I heard and saw warblers in seemingly every forested patch that I could find.  There’s an expression in birding, often used with warblers during migration in South Dakota, where on the rare occasion the birds are “dripping off the trees”, there seem to be so many.  I wouldn’t say they were exactly dripping off the trees in Maine, but they were quite easy to hear and see.

Common Eider

Common Eider

But to photograph? Not so much!  They were STILL warblers, after all, with the tendency to fly out of the frame JUST when you trip the camera’s shutter, and several species did indeed typically stay high in the forest canopy.  The weather also didn’t help!  It only truly rained a couple of days in the two weeks we were in Maine, but there were many days where it was overcast, and sometimes foggy.   Low light plus very active birds?  Not a great combination for photography!  Despite that though, I had a wonderful time on my morning excursions.  I’ve been doing birding and photography for about 12 years now, and after that much time, it’s getting tougher and tougher to photograph a “new” species, one I haven’t photographed before.  However, on this trip, I was able to get photographs for 6 “new” species.

Black-and-White Warbler

Black-and-White Warbler

I’ve actually seen each of these before, but haven’t been able to get photographs.  The 6 new ones were 1) Black-throated Blue Warbler 2) Black-throated Green Warbler 3) Canada Warbler 4) Blackburnian Warbler 5) Northern Parula and 6) Common Eider.  It was a bit frustrating in that there were about 6 other “new” species that I saw or heard, but was unable to photograph.   However, I’ll never complain about a trip where I was able to get good warbler photos, of species I hadn’t photographed before.

Great trip, very relaxing, and new bird photos as well!