Bird Id Part Ii

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  • 10-31-2005, 08:21 PM
    Mike T
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    The area I was in was pretty built up but I saw on a map a state park on the gulf so I took a short ride there. It was called Honeymoon Island State Park and in the park was a nature trail named The Osprey Trail and this was a very accurate name. There were several nests not far from the trail and many Osprey flying around. Here's one of the ones I was pretty close to.
    Mike

    ps. since I named the bird how about IDing its meal
  • 10-31-2005, 08:21 PM
    paulnj
    Re: A nest full of babies
    Eastern Pheobe is my educated guess :)
  • 10-31-2005, 09:00 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    PALM WARBLER :) 8 out of 10 wintering warblers are palms in florida.... so I have seen ;)
  • 10-31-2005, 09:00 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Woodpecker of some sort.
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by mjs1973
    I was going thru some old pics looking for eagles and came across this guy.

    It's a Downy woodpecker
  • 10-31-2005, 09:01 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Mike T
    I go away for a few days and come home to a new forum, here's a shot I took saturday down on the Gulf coast of Florida.
    Mike


    Little blue heron and a snowy egret :)
  • 10-31-2005, 09:01 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Mike T
    The area I was in was pretty built up but I saw on a map a state park on the gulf so I took a short ride there. It was called Honeymoon Island State Park and in the park was a nature trail named The Osprey Trail and this was a very accurate name. There were several nests not far from the trail and many Osprey flying around. Here's one of the ones I was pretty close to.
    Mike

    ps. since I named the bird how about IDing its meal

    LOOKS like a Mullet to me.
  • 10-31-2005, 09:09 PM
    Lava Lamp
    1 Attachment(s)
    I Dunno
    These littel ones are confusing. Found him at the edge of woods leading to a salt marsh...
  • 10-31-2005, 09:18 PM
    paulnj
    Re: I Dunno
    That's a mockingbird.... not that little ;)
  • 11-01-2005, 07:09 AM
    mjs1973
    Re: A nest full of babies
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulnj
    Eastern Pheobe is my educated guess :)

    Baby robins. The only reason I know is because mom and dad made sure we kept some distance from them. Made grilling out on the back deck very interesting. :)
  • 11-01-2005, 07:53 PM
    paulnj
    Re: A nest full of babies
    Well..... :o I was close :p
  • 11-02-2005, 06:57 AM
    mjs1973
    Re: A nest full of babies
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulnj
    Well..... :o I was close :p

    Yes you were, and your skills just amaze me!
  • 11-02-2005, 07:37 AM
    Mike T
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Another bird from down in Florida
    Mike
  • 11-02-2005, 07:16 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Do you know what it is.... I do :)

    Prairie warbler
  • 11-02-2005, 07:18 PM
    paulnj
    Re: A nest full of babies
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by mjs1973
    Yes you were, and your skills just amaze me!

    Why thank you, but I must admit my skills are getting foggy from lack of birding this year.
  • 11-03-2005, 08:42 PM
    JSPhoto
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    This should be easy for you Paul...... I hear there are several in the woods below, so I'm going to spend some time there next week and see if I can get some GOOD sshots... unlike this one. :o

    JS
  • 11-03-2005, 09:43 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Well..... only a redtailed hawk "kites" like that ;)

    Hawks in general are secretive in nature(as are most wild animals), so getting close will take patience and a bit of luck ;)

    My suggestion is the approach B moose Peterson used in the beginning in his camaro..... drive around and watch ahead. KILL the engine and coast up to your subject while still being innn you mobile blind :) It does work sometimes on perched hawks.

    Another way(my favorite) is to find a hillside clearing and wait for the area hawks to come by. KNOWING your subject( it's habits, flight pattern, favorite perches, hunting grounds...) is just as important in wildlife as it is in sports :)
  • 11-03-2005, 09:58 PM
    JSPhoto
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    I knew you'd get it... :) lol, even with that bad shot. It was a 100% crop of a raw file from the 28-300mm lens, so it was about 390mm (1.3 on the MKII N sensor). The woods where they live are very small, maybe 8 acres at most. No hills as such, Indiana is flat, and this area is all corn/soybean fields.
    I guess I'll just have to spend some time waiting on them to see where they go and when. The guy says there may be as many as 5 of them.

    JS
  • 11-03-2005, 10:18 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Well..... they are migrating right now, but very well may stay in your area(some stay here year round)

    Since you have corn/soy field, you WILL get harriers and roughlegged hawks wintering if the conditions are right. Also if the fields are VAST enough, many hundreds of acres , you may get short eared owls this winter hunting as the sun drops low ;)


    Chinook Mines in Clay County Indiana in december/ january will give you a good chance at all 3 species ;) I love google !
  • 11-03-2005, 10:25 PM
    paulnj
    1 Attachment(s)
    Re: Bird ID part 2
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulnj
    Back by popular demand !!!

    OK, Since I want people to learn....

    Let's see who can ID this :)

    It's 1/3RD the frame BTW to make EVERY field mark visible :)
  • 11-03-2005, 10:27 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird ID part 2
    I want a PERFECT ID too ;)

    I will give it a few days or 2 CORRECT perfect ID's ;)
  • 11-03-2005, 10:33 PM
    JSPhoto
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Hmmm, Interesting... I have been looking for somewhere to go. I never heard of Chinhook Mines before...I'll look that up! I had heard that Patoka Lake in Southern Indiana has Bald Eagles, and in February they have a big deal there and a day for spotting them where a lot of people show up. It's on the Indiana DNR site for Patoka Lake and C52 website which is a site for a captive Bald Eagle. This Bald Eagle was born with a defect in its wing (s) and cannot fly.
    C52's Website: http://www.in.gov/dnr/c52/HowToSpot.html

    In the years I have lived in Indiana I saw one owl, twice, two days apart. This past summer I had one in my back yard but could not find it. I also have woodpeckers that I cannot find no matter what I do. I see their holes though! I have pine trees in front and in back of my property, and behind that is a 17 acre field (corn this year), across the street is a 324 acre farm field as well. I'm out in farm country, for maybe 5 more years, then the developements will be here too :mad: .

    Thanks for the info Paul, I'll check it out!

    JS
  • 11-04-2005, 07:11 AM
    mjs1973
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Thanks for the homework Paul. This will give me a chance to test out my new bird book. I did get the Smithsonian book I was asking about in my other thread from earlier this week. Only bad thing with this assignment is that now I'm afraid to read the rest of the posts in this thread because I don't want any help IDing this bird. :)
  • 11-04-2005, 12:21 PM
    srobb
    Re: Bird ID part 2
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulnj
    I want a PERFECT ID too ;)

    I will give it a few days or 2 CORRECT perfect ID's ;)



    Without going through the whole thread and ruining my chances, I would say on first guess that it is a Coopers Hawk.
  • 11-04-2005, 05:18 PM
    mjs1973
    Re: Bird ID part 2
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulnj
    OK, Since I want people to learn....

    Let's see who can ID this :)

    It's 1/3RD the frame BTW to make EVERY field mark visible :)


    My uneducated guess is Accipiter striatus aka Sharp-shinned Hawk.
  • 11-04-2005, 07:37 PM
    paulnj
    Re: Bird Id Part Ii
    Well february is the beginning of nesting season for raptors ;), which is why they do it then. Great horned owls fledge from the nest in may, while some eaglecmay fledge as late as early july(unless in FL where they double clutch at times). If you have open water in your area in winter(lakes, big rivers... DAM OVERFLOWS!!) You should be able to find an eagle there if fishing is good) I go to the hudson river NYC parks, Rio res. near port jervis NY and the Conawingo dam in maryland to see eagles in winter(if time permits) I usually can find 30 + in a day in NY and 30-150 in maryland if conditions are right)