While out in California a few weeks ago, I had the pleasure of watching the courtship dance of two Clark’s Grebes. Here is a sequence of 34 shots depicting the dance I saw. This is less than half of the shots but several were very similar in a row and I only used one. There was a lot of head bobbing and using their beak to fling water to the side. At the end, they normally are nearly completely out of the water and you can see their feet as the run on the surface. These two did not get that far up in the water.
Author: David.E.Allen
His Own Worst Enemy
I had been watching this Northern Cardinal attack its reflection in the window of my truck for a while. When he saw the mirror, he became even more aggressive, so I took a few shots. He repeated the same sequence several times. Awareness of the male in the mirror, Attack!, Attack!, Attack!, Victory!
On a subsequent visit to that same spot about three weeks later, I was barely out of the truck when it started attacking again. I guess he just doesn’t like my truck.
American Crow Attacking a Red-shouldered Hawk
As we were wrapping up our March 6, 2022 hike at Cedar Hill State Park and trying to dodge the light rain that was trying to start, we saw this American Crow start attacking a Red-shouldered Hawk, so I started taking shots in burst mode. American Crows are well-known for attacking birds of prey, presumably going on the offense as a defense mechanism against the predators. If you look closely at the sequence of photos, the hawk appears to have some nesting material in it talons, so it was not out hunting. It was exciting to see and capture this interaction.
The Great Backyard Bird Count
My wife and I drove to the Acton Nature Preserve on Saturday (2/19/2022) to participate in the Great Backyard Bird Count. Our group on Saturday counted 30 species and one hybrid for a total of 347 individual birds. For more information on the event please go to https://www.birdcount.org/.
I took pictures of 19 different species and saw several more of which I could not get a photograph (Great-tailed Grackle, Bufflehead, and Great Blue Heron are the two I remember specifically). Three species did not have usable photos (Black Vulture, Carolina Chickadee, and Red-winged Blackbird), so I ended up with 16 decent to good photographs. These birds were: American Goldfinch, Bewick’s Wren, Black-created/Tufted Titmouse hybrid, Brown-headed Cowbird, Chipping Sparrow, Dark-eyed Junco, Eastern Bluebird, Field Sparrow, Harris Sparrow, Hooded Merganser (on a pond adjacent to the Nature Center), Northern Cardinal (two separate photographs: one male, one female), Northern Mockingbird, Sharp-shinned Hawk (that was eating a cotton rat), Song Sparrow, White-crowned Sparrow, and White-throated Sparrow.
Three of these photographed birds were new species for my life list, all sparrows:
After the bird count, we got to listen to a wonderful lecture on the history and changes to bird naming conventions by Dr. Billy Teels. It was extremely interesting.
It was a great day!
February 12-13 Adventures
I had not planned on going out on Saturday (2/12) as the weather was not really conducive to birding. I had heard about some owls at Colleyville Nature Center and was planning on heading out there on Sunday, as the weather was to be improved. However, Friday was a particularly bad day, so I just needed to get into the woods and clear my head. I am glad I went out even though the lighting was terrible and I was not expecting to take any decent photographs. My first stop at the Fort Worth Nature Preserve Cross Timbers Trailhead resulted in the usual suspects that hang out in the at area, American Coots, American White Pelicans, Mallards, etc.
After hanging out that for a bit, I decided to head down the road to see if the racoon was back in the hollow tree. I was driving slowly, noticing the birds flitting about in the trees. I came to one area and I saw some woodpeckers, so I went to the next parking area and walked back and sat on a downed tree to let the area calm. I saw four members of the Picidae family: Red-bellied Woodpecker, Northern Flicker, Downy Woodpecker, and a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (a new species for my life list). So I was feeling pretty good about then. I am looking forward to visiting the Woodpecker Woods again soon.
After a while, I went back to driving to the hollow tree, but it was empty. I decided to head to the Marsh Boardwalk to see what was hanging out in the shallow area (I got a Swamp Sparrow the week before, another new member of my life list). However, I only saw some Mallards, Green-winged Teal, and a Canvasback. As I walked out onto the platform, I noticed a small group of Hooded Mergansers about 150-200 yards to my right. Although not new to my life list, the only picture I had was a fairly blurry one that I had to “over process.” They knew I was there, even at that distance, as they slowly swam in the opposite direction. I did manage to get some nice shots, but from 200 yards, they are not too detailed.
Later that afternoon while at home, my viewfinder autofocus decided to stop working. Live View autofocus still worked (through the LCD screen on the back of the camera), but I shoot 99% of the time using the viewfinder. After hours working with it, researching, and talking with Canon support, it is getting shipped to the service center to be fixed. That left me without my new camera to go see the owls on Sunday. Fortunately, I had my older Canon Rebel T3i camera, so off I went early in the morning to be there about sunrise. The Colleyville Nature Center was awesome. However, my photographs were not. I think the camera’s sensor needed a good cleaning (I picked up the camera today from getting it cleaned), but I did manage to get a few good pictures of a squirrel, and I did get to take a photograph of the Barred Owls. Who knows when I will get my camera back, but at least I have a back up for now.
New Bird for Cleburne State Park
We really enjoy the Texas State Parks and and eventually want to visit them all. Recently (12/28/2022) we visited Cleburne State Park for the first time and found it to be a charming place with some nice birds and hiking. When we returned home, I found that what I thought was a Tufted Titmouse was actually a Black-crested Titmouse. When I checked the park’s bird list, the Black-crested Titmouse was not on it, so as far as I know, I am the first person to seed this particular species of bird at the park, so that was pretty cool. I sent them a picture through their Facebook page to let them know they have a new species and they posted the photo.
We went back to the park on January 29, 2022 to do some more birding and just happened to arrive as a Birding 101 program, organized by the park, was gathering. So we joined the group and had a really good time. Here is a picture of the group. I am third from the right and my wife is to my right.
I am looking forward to my next visit to the park, especially when it get warmer and we can take our kayaks! If you are in the area and want a nice place to take a relaxing hike and enjoy nature, I highly recommend stopping by for a visit.
Thanks for reading!
-David
Welcome
I finally have the webpage pretty much caught up (as of 2/4/2022). As I write this post, I have 400 photographs of 119 different species of birds on the Bird Species List. I have two additional birds in the David’s Favorites lists. Both are identified below each photograph.
I believe strongly in transparency and hope this webpage/blog will be entertaining as well as educational. To that end, I am not out to post the best images I have, but to provide an honest account of my journey through amateur photography. I have posted photos taken with various cameras and telephone cameras. Some are really good and some are really bad, with most somewhere in between. I want those interested to see my journey, the good and the bad. Hopefully this will help others on their journey to either learn from my trials or to commiserate on things we could have done better. It is a learning process and I welcome you to come along and join in the fun.
Now that I am caught up, I have started a few collections of my favorite (although not always best) photographs. I have loosely grouped them by some themes to try to remain organized. I am also going to start writing blog posts to help document my journey. I hope to write about things such as the different photographic equipment I have used and the research into them (if applicable). I also want to talk about species identification, photography on a budget (I would really like a Canon RF 600 mm f/4 L-series lens, but I just can’t spend $13,000 on a lens), and various other topics. If there is anything you want me to address, I will do my best, just let me know.
Thanks for reading!
-David