Anyway, I am still looking back over the year just passed, and remembering some wonderful bird encounters as I ogle these images. I hope you like them too.
Male mountain bluebird, Hidden Peak near Snowbird in Utah, June.
My name is Bill and I am a bird watcher.
Zeiss Victory FL 8x42, Swarovski EL 10x42
Leica Televid 85mm with 15–50x zoom eyepiece
Swarovski ATS 65mm with 20–60x zoom eyepiece
Bogen Manfrotto 055CX3 carbon fiber tripod, with Bogen 3130 Micro-fluid style pan head
More of Bill's GearPeterson Field Guide to the Birds of North America (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2008)
Sibley Guide to Birds of North America (Knopf 2014)
The New Birder’s Guide to Birds of Eastern North America (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2014)
More of Bill's GearMountainsmith Tour recycled materials lumbar pack Pajaro Grande field guide pack
LowePro Toploader 75W camera bag with harness belt
Outerwear: Arcteryx waterproof shell, Mountain Hardwear breathable rain jacket, Helly Hansen insulate rain jacket
Hat: Dorfman Pacific Company field hat
Shoes: Keen Newports, Arroyos & Arubas
Boots: Merrell Moab Ventilator Mid; MuckBoot Company Wetlands insulated rubber boots
Apple MacBook Pro laptop
Apple iPhone 6s with numerous birding apps,
Creative Travelsound i80 speaker MF5110
Motorola T6500 WalkieTalkies
Petzl Tikka headlamp
SuperLazr laserpointer
Canon EOS 30D Digital SLR camera with 300mm fixed IS lens (for bird photography)
iPhone 6s with PhoneSkope adapter for Leica spotting scope
More of Bill's Gear
4 comments:
Wonderful eye candy! I especially loved the eagles and the trio getting ready to sing, but they are all wonderful.
Tasty
Hi - this is a little off topic of this post, but I just found you! I am a new bird watcher, led into this by my cat. She has chronic health issues and it was suggested that I put up some bird feeders for a distraction for her. Little did I know what she would lead me in to! I'm disabled myself, so I have some of the same benefits that my cat has discovered.
Several window-feeders later and even a heated birdbath mounted to a window ledge where neither ledge nor bath were meant to be (and befriending a pack of squirrels and a trio of cottontails as well as several regular birds that are even named because they visit so often).. yeah, I'm hooked.
This has probably been addressed years ago, but I have read the For Dummies book, and because the birds come so close to me (a chickadee even eating from my hand), I get some really incredible observations. I often wondered how their little feet managed to hold on to cold surfaces during our New York winters, and was more reassured by your mentioning that their legs are mostly bone and ropy muscles.
I have noticed this year that my little songbirds have another method - they hop around on one foot and tuck the other up in their tummy fluff, then switch feet when the "outdoor" foot gets cold. I've seen my juncos, titmice, and chickadees do this when they "ground feed". I'm sure someone has already pointed this out, but I sure felt for the li'l guys - especially on a day when it was so cold, I actually saw steam coming from one goldfinch as he fed from my window feeder as he breathed!
Anyway, I just wanted to thank you for helping further my delight in my many critters, from the Titmice Trio, the Chickadee Duet, Big Daddy and Big Momma (hairy woodpeckers), OneFoot (junco), and all the others.
Bill, you're the master. I can't get enough of your eye candy.
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