Category Archives: Birds

Weekly Photo Challenge:Reflections

summer swans8165-2Friends, another entry to this weeks theme: reflections,  i needed a warmer image this morning to stimulate my morning, coffee is not doing the trick this morning, still really groggy, blame it on the weather.  This image was taken this summer, but the background as is was too busy, so i put the swans on their own layer and blurred the background and gave it a slightly foggy feel.  These trumpeter swans are now floating in a non-distracting background with a lovely foggy reflection.  Sometimes the differences between sharpness can also be used to make the subject more prominent. til Tomorrow MJ

A sharper image

sandhill face detailedFriends, this sandhill crane is similarly processed like the top image in yesterday’s post.  First a short lesson about shooting jpegs vs raw captures.  A jpeg image is processed and sharpened in the camera, while a raw is basically unprocessed by camera software.  Since a computer (and photoshop) have a lot more tools to process an image optimally, it makes sense to me, to use the camera for capturing an image (raw) and a computer for processing the image.  So this image was captured in raw, converted to psd format and exposure adjusted in photoshop then finished with Color Effex Pro 4- detail extractor.  I think that the sharpness achieved in this software program is superior to those results that i can get in Photoshop or in the raw converter in Photoshop.  I think, and this is my opinion, capturing a digital image and processing that image are both necessary steps to great photography.  Post-processing does not diminishes the skill of the photographer but is necessary to impart the mood of the photo.  Just as Ansel Adams developed a print from a camera-captured negative, so we need to post-process from a digitally captured image.  What do you think? til Tomorrow MJ

Is there a difference?

broadwing portrait2Friends,are there any differences in these two images that can be detected on wordpress? I have run out of processed bird images and in culling through my entire library of images shot at Hawk Ridge, I found a few that i wanted to include in my book.  Did I mention that I was writing a book about Hawk Ridge and my experiences up there this fall?  Well, I am and I am going to take you along for the ride.  Book preparation first needs some first class images.  I was not entirely satisfied with this image as it was processed in the raw converter in Photoshop.  One of the images is the raw, the other of this Broadwing Hawk is processed further in Photoshop.  Can you tell which one?  til Tomorrow MJbw portrati as is from raw

Weekly Photo Challenge:Reflections

face of the cooperFriends, the reflections in this Cooper Hawk’s eye show off his brilliant yellow eye.  He is a juvenile and when he is one year old, this eye color will shift to an orange, then to red as he ages further.  The shadow from the supraorbital ridge above his eye makes him look very fierce.  I love the feathering patterns around that reflected highlight in his eye, a reflection of the sky. til Tomorrow MJ

 

Another Sparrow

chipping sparrow

Friends, this chipping sparrow ( i think) also comes to you from Hawk Ridge.  The migration of the passerines is also monitored from Hawk Ridge  The smaller birds are counted and some are banded as they pass through and get some seed at the feeders. This bird was busy munching on sunflower seeds as I crept close enough for a portrait. I love their tiny feathers around the face.  til Tomorrow MJchipping sparrow detail

Red Pine Sunset

red pines sundownFriends, the end of a perfect winter day, this red pine grove is halfway home from Crex Meadows and I often see it at sunset.  Spending the day at Crex is a passion even when the summer birds have gone south.  The only birds remaining are natives and those that migrate from the far northern regions.  Currently there are Rough-legged hawks, bald eagles, a harrier, osprey and an occasional red-tailed hawk,  I am chasing otters, timber wolves, white tail deer and other illusive ghosts thru the 30,000 acres of marsh and woodlands that is Crex.  Finding tracks but nothing else so now i have to resort to some sunset images to be able to show you the wonders of Crex. til Tomorrow MJ

Sparrow Ridge?

Friends, this tiny bird is a white-throated sparrow visiting Hawk Ridge sometime in October.  I love the little yellow spot in front of his eye, the image below is a close-up of his head.  You can see the new bracelet that the banders have given him .  Some of these little birds are captured more than once cause they tend to hang around the bird feeders.  Lots of birds follow Hawk Ridge on their migration routes, so maybe Hawk Ridge should be called Bird Ridge.  Just kidding of course, the more spectacular birds always bring the crowds. til Tomorrow MJ

COLD !!

Friends, i saw this at Crex when the full moon rose in the late afternoon, but it took two layers to show it to you.  The Bald Eagle was the bottom layer with the moon added on top. This is a photograph of the feelings that at times inspire a artful approach.  The moon and the eagle are in a very cold light against the pure blue sky and the temperature outside was also cold.So this morning a cold start to your day. til Tomorrow MJ

Hardy Snipe

Friends, this hardy Snipe is still hanging around on the icy edges of a pond that has not closed up yet, but the temperature this morning was only 9 degrees above zero Fahrenheit, so the water will soon close. Hope he gets his breakfast and hurries on his way south, it is not healthy to stay too long.  Below is another image of him enjoying the bitter cold sunshine, he was holding up his foot trying to warm it under his body.  Enjoy the sun while you can, til Tomorrow MJ

Notched tail- Redtail

Friends, this is a red tail from a large female Redtailed Hawk.  While examining her in hand, she had two missing feathers on the left side of her tail, and two new feathers are growing back.  These new feathers are a little fresher looking than the other older feathers.  A weathered veteran of the wilderness wars, this image demonstrates that hawks are also in peril and often are the hunted ones as well as being the hunter.  Below is an image of her release back, the shorter feathers were not slowing her flight back to the wildness. An account of two eagles pursuing a redtail is included in this link: redtail pursued by golden eagles