Upland Sandpiper (and Hoot!)

It is a great day for birding when one hits two very different locations, and is still home by 9:30 am having had a fantastic time. I left the house at 5:30 am and drove over to Cloverland , Wisconsin. The grasslands allow for viewing opportunities not seen in the Boreal Forest where I live in northeastern Minnesota. In under 40 minutes I am birding. This morning I enjoyed a rare treat, an Upland Sandpiper. This bird migrates all the way from central South American. It will start the winter migration back south within a few weeks (before August 1st). As I said … I was thrilled to see this bird. My video includes a short clip of it singing.

Upland Sandpiper

Upland Sandpiper Video (link for email subscribers)

After birding NW Wisconsin I returned home and took a hike over to my “owling grounds”. By following some chirping robins I found two of the triplets. I have found that these Great Horned Owl juveniles will often do a “quick hunt” around 9 am before retiring to sleep for the day. This assumes no pesky crows are around to make life difficult. My owls take a snooze starting around 5:30 am … wake up about 8:30 am, and then sleeeeep.

Hoot on the Hunt!

Finally here is a “flight shot failure”. My Great Horned Owl friend had telegraphed that it was about to fly. I changed my settings in an attempt to capture the owl in flight. No go! My camera was not up to taking a photograph in deep shade. I have often talked about my camera, a Canon SX70. I like the camera but it has problems in low light situations like this morning (i.e. if I need fast exposures). I think it is important to show failures on occasion. I still love the SX70. It is lightweight and easy to take on my hikes and bike rides where a DSLR with a long lens would be impractical. Hiking “off trail” and over deadfall is a challenge. I was often high stepping.

Still Image Owl Photo Settings: ISO 100, Exposure 1/100th second, Aperture 5.6

Flight Shot Failure Settings: ISO 1,000, Exposure 1/800th second, Aperture 5.6
Note: I reduced the quality level of the image over 3x in an attempt to get a fast shutter speed.

Bad Image (camera was not able to properly focus … I had four other images in this sequence starting with preparation for take-off.

2 thoughts on “Upland Sandpiper (and Hoot!)

  1. Thanks to everyone who puts up with my typos, etc. I got a laugh out of one of my own mistakes on this blog post. In describing the “flight shot failure”, I meant to type “low light”, but auto correct changed that to “love light” (now corrected) in the original post. I did mention the faux pas with a laugh to my wife! I suspect my Canon Sx70 might be challenged in Love Light situations, but I’ve never run such a test.

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