American Kestrels at the Bosque del Apache NWR

Continuing with the Bosque del Apache saga, on our first day in the refuge, when driving along a road that connects the two (North and South) Loop Roads, I saw a movement off the road about 40-50 feet from us.  I stopped and saw a female American Kestrel on a tree branch… and she was located below our eye level!

I want to say that I have found these birds extremely difficult to photograph in Skagit County.  When I find them they are almost always on a power line or pole and they are extremely sensitive to approaching vehicles, especially if the vehicle shows any sign of slowing down or stopping.  Consequently, although I do have some decent photos of kestrels, they are always posed on the aforementioned power lines or poles.

So it was especially gratifying to be able to get so close to a kestrel in a natural setting.  I took all of the photos I wanted before driving on down the road.

Female American Kestrel

Female American Kestrel

Female American Kestrel

This female was apparently in the same general area for all three of our birding days at the Bosque, and on our final day of the trip we were rewarded with photo opportunities of at least three kestrels on the same short stretch of road, including a male.  So here are some photos of the American kestrel photographed in the Bosque del Apache NWR south of Socorro, NM.

Male American Kestrel

Cranes, Cornfields and Coyotes

The Bosque del Apache NWR is located in central New Mexico, a little over an hour’s drive south of Albuquerque, NM.  It’s my favorite location for birding.  Much of the effort in managing the refuge is for the benefit of Sandhill cranes, Snow geese and other waterfowl.  In the winter months the refuge is home to tens of thousands of these birds.  But like any other natural place, good habitat attracts a wide variety of birds and other wildlife.

Management of the refuge must be a fairly complicated matter.  There are many different areas that are, or can be, flooded by use of irrigation channels.  Parts of the preserve are dedicated to growing crops (corn) that will attract and provide food for the birds through the winter.  And the refuge is constantly being inundated with invasive salt cedar which is battled with considerable effort and cost.

During the day a substantial number of the cranes and geese can be found in, or around the edges of, cornfields.  The birds are generally somewhat hesitant to enter the cornfields because the coyotes can hide in the corn and ambush the birds as they feed, so the majority of the birds stand around the edges of the cornfields while some of the ones that are hungrier or bolder enter the standing corn for food.  Throughout the winter portions of the cornfields are knocked down to provide food for the birds.

Sandhill cranes and Snow geese feeding in and near one of the cornfields at the Bosque.

In the late afternoons the coyotes, which are mainly nocturnal, employ various tactics to make a meal off the birds.  They skirt the flocks of birds in and around the corn fields looking for any that might be sick, injured or just not up to par on self-preservation.  Although I’ve never seen a coyote take a bird you must assume it happens on a regular basis or else the coyotes wouldn’t spend the time or effort in their pursuit.  While some coyotes appear to try to sneak up on the birds, others are fairly open concerning their intentions.  In the photo posted below, this coyote is taking the direct approach to a cornfield but on the previous evening we watched for almost an hour as a coyote sought to hide in low cornfield stubble and ambush unwary birds.

Coyote making a direct approach to the cornfield.

Just before dark the cranes, geese and ducks fly in small groups to the relative safety of the shallow ponds that are scattered over the refuge, where they spend the night.  The ponds often freeze over during the cold nights but offer some protection from the coyotes.  The water probably provides some warning of coyotes’ approach and perhaps the coyotes are somewhat dissuaded from entering the water or venturing out on thin ice.

Sandhill cranes flying back to one of Bosque’s ponds for safety during the night.

Each winter morning there occurs just before sunrise what is termed ‘the fly-off’.  Within a very short period of time, sometimes measured in mere seconds, the thousands of birds that have over-nighted at the refuge rise together and fly off to feed in the various fields both on the preserve and on private land in the general area.  This event attracts observers and photographers from all over the world.

And each and every day of the winter the cycle repeats itself.

You can learn more (and perhaps obtain more accurate information) about the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, including their weekly bird count, by visiting these web sites:

 http://www.fws.gov/southwest/refuges/newmex/bosque/

www.friendsofthebosque.org/

Bosque del Apache and Nikon

Our Anacortes weather hasn’t been conducive to taking photographs and I’ve been busy with seasonal activities, so to be able to keep the postings flowing I’m going to post some photos and commentary relating to the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge just south of Socorro, New Mexico.  The Bosque, as is familiarly known, is known for its Sandhill crane population that winters on the refuge.  I’ll go into a little more detail regarding the cranes in a future post, but first I want to highlight a remarkable photographic engineering fete regarding the camera and lens I use. 

As stated elsewhere on this site, my primary camera is a Nikon D-300S.  With it I use a Nikkor F4 200-400mm lens, occasionally augmented by a 1.7X tele-extender, an additional lens that fits between the primary lens and the camera body.  The Nikkor lens has image stabilization which is very useful, and I usually obtain further stabilization from a carbon fiber monopod which, while not as steady as a tripod, nevertheless provides good stabilization and more flexibility. 

One evening at the Bosque, as the sun was setting, I took the following photograph of a Sandhill crane in flight.  

Uncropped Sandhill crane in flight

Due to the magnification of the lens at 400mm, the photo was taken at a range of something I would estimate at 50 yards or more. 

Cropping the photograph to make it more interesting (ie, eliminating a considerable amount of surrounding ‘nothingness’) gives the following image.  

Cropped photo of Sandhill crane

But the amazing feat of this camera and lens is that magnifying the images even more reveals that it is still very sharp… so sharp, in fact, that you can see through the hole (nostril?) in the crane’s bill!  

Keep in mind that this was in fading light, with a 400mm lens and a subject in motion! 

Next up:  Coyotes versus Cranes in the Cornfields   (How’s that for alliteration?  I have several prior English teachers who, were they still alive, would be very proud of me!)

Hooded Mergansers and Belted Kingfisher

Female Hooded Merganser

We’ve had a rough week of weather for photography but I managed to get out for a couple of hours on Friday morning. My initial purpose was to again locate and photograph the leucistic Varied thrush. Even though I found a couple of Varied thrushes in the area in which the bird had last been reported, I did not see the leucistic thrush. This probably makes me about zero for six on those excursions for the past couple of weeks.

Male Hooded Merganser

I decided to perform a little birding from the car as the chances of rain seemed to be too high to get afield. I eventually drifted over to Pass Lake where I found a couple of Hooded mergansers paddling around behind brush piles. They were working to avoid a couple of fishermen so my photography session was interrupted, but while I was waiting a male Belted kingfisher flew into a nearby tree, so I also obtained photos of it.

Male Belted Kingfisher

Dark-Eyed Junco – Slate-Colored Race

I first want to thank all of you ‘scouts’ who have been keeping me apprised of sightings of the leucistic Varied thrush in Washington Park.  I received another relayed communication that the bird was seen in the park this morning, but I chose not to go until mid-afternoon and saw no sign of the bird as is usual for that time of day.  For the best chances of sighting the bird one needs to be at the park not long after 7am… in other words, virtually in the dark.

Slate-colored race of a Dark-eyed Junco

Oregon race of the Dark-eyed junco

On the other hand, I spent a little time in the yard today hoping to obtain more photos of some of our rarer yard birds.  While I saw a male Anna’s hummingbird taking a bath (!) in  water in which I can hardly stand to place my hand due to its temperature, I was unable to obtain a photo.  However I did have some success with one of our rarer visitors… a Dark-eyed junco of the Slate-colored race.  This bird, or one of its kin, has been in our yard every winter since 1996-97!  Each year we only have a single one and I often wonder if it’s the same bird that keeps returning.  It seems rather far-fetched, but then the fact that we have only a single one each year might lend some strength to the theory that it’s the same bird. I would be so appreciative if it would bring its family for the winter!

 

As is the case each year, we are overwhelmed with Oregon race juncos and the color of their plumage varies greatly.  Some are quite striking in their colors and others are very pale.  Picking the Slate-colored junco from the Oregon juncos would be very difficult if it were not for the behavior of the bird.  The Slate-colored junco does not appear to mix well with the other juncos and it is much shyer.  Were it not for these behavioral characteristics I probably wouldn’t notice it.

Oregon race of the Dark-eyed junco

To better appreciate these photos you should click on them to enlarge them to full-screen size!