Hi folks,
Just got back from another warbler birding expedition. Each one just further highlights the BIG differences between birding and bird photography. They see a Blue-Headed Vireo in the tops of a 60 foot tree and they're happy. So am I but it doesn't do me a darn bit of good with my camera and 400mm lens. Particularly when it is backlit, etc. Each time out, I am lucky of I come back with one or two birds photographed. Yesterday it was a Black and White Warbler and the Eastern Screech Owl. Today it was a pair to Tree Swallows and a Rufous-Sided Towhee.
Thanks. While these are just 4 of nearly 100 shots that I took, I was glad that I got at least some that turned out ok. It was difficult shooting pretty much straight up the tree and through all those leaves and branches.
stevefossimages wrote in post #3122961
It is a red phase screech owl.
There are three screech owl color morphs: gray, brown and red. The red morph can be common, or fairly rare, depending partly on geographic region. According to Sibley, as much as 60 percent of the screech owl population in Mideastern states (Ohio to Virginia) is made up of red morphs, while only 7 percent of the Great Plains population is made up of reds.
In general, northern screech owls are a bit larger and fluffier than southerns, also according to Sibley.
Screech owls caught roosting during the day rarely put on any kind of show, and often won't even open their eyes. Small birds such as chickadees will taunt and harass screech owls in daytime, and the belief is that the large bold eye of the owl is one way the small birds spot them.
Thanks for all the info Steve. Sibley's sounds like an excellent reference. I may get one someday. Wait, I did order one and Amazon (well more correctly the USPS) has lost it.
I was told to wait until 5/1 before filing a claim through Amazon! So eventually, hopefully, I will have a copy! Again thanks for the all the info. I really appreciate it.
And yes, the little songbirds could have cared less that he was in the tree. They just kept on flitting all over the place.
ngannet wrote in post #3122712
Oh man, I'm so jealous! Awesome shots, I've never seen a red morph Screech owl! Tough to shoot through all those leaves (spring is a mixed blessing!) but you did really well.
Thanks Bob. You would have had to see it to believe it. A path splits around a small stand of trees and the owl was in one of those trees with people walking, jogging and cycling on both sides. There I am with the tripod, camera and 400mm lens. And I kept moving back and forth from one small area where I could get a front perspective through the leaves to one small back perspective where I could get the same. When I was shooting, I had the center column extended way too far and the camera pointed pretty much straight up. During all that time (I was there nearly an hour), I had exactly one person stop and ask what I was looking at.
When I got home I told my wife that I must have taken 100 images of the owl and didn't think any would turn out alright. As I started to scan though them, I was pleased with some of the images. Not great but pretty good, I thought, given the circumstances.
So again, thanks all.