All posts by richardhoeg@gmail.com

Begging Blue Jays

The official winter migration south begins today, August 1st. Although it may seem like we are still in the midst of summer, the food sources will soon get scarcer. Birds know this fact, and many species are already working their way south:

Current migration conditions for today. Hummingbirds and Arctic Shorebirds are already well into their migrations. Birds that eat bugs will be next. While Spring migration is a quick affair, during the Fall, birds will pause their movements southward and linger if a good food source is apparent.

The latest to fledge in the Amity Woods are Blue Jays. Here are three photos … one of an adult flanked by two “begging kids”. Do these juvenile Blue Jays ever remind you of your own children?!

Steam Shovel Sally’s Kids

“Steam Shovel Sally’s” kids on Lavaque Road in the Duluth area are learning how to fly today). Lots of fun to watch, and unlike in the Olympics, the Osprey chicks are not earning perfect 10’s and sticking their landings. Still learning about upwind approaches! I suspect these young raptors will be fully fledged in a day or two, then come fishing lessons.

Ten years ago a gentleman than owns a construction firm hoisted a shovel high in the sky. Within two years the ospreys adopted “the bucket”!

The Eyes!

Take-Off!

Hanging Out (2 different birds)

Meanwhile Back at the Nest (three attempts to land)

Bee Balm Beauties

Soon January will be here with its -30F degree weather, but for the moment it is summer and all our garden’s  perennials are ablaze in their glory. In addition, the Black-Eyed Susans in our yard’s tall grasses do the landscape with lots of yellow. Thus, I spent another evening with Chardonnay and Hummers!

The trend continues that I have not seen any male Ruby-Throats for several days. I suspect they have begun their long migration to South America. However the youngsters are madly fighting over the Bee Balm. On quiet evenings (not much wind), I can even hear the hummingbirds singing!

This one hummer hides in a tree ten yards from the flowers. If another Ruby-Throat ventures to close to our garden, this bird enters attack mode.

Surrounding our Bee Balm are lots and lots of Purple Cone Flowers


Finally some camera notes … while I do very little post processing of my images, these are the basics which I often tweak:

  • Open JPG file in Camera Raw (I do not shoot in raw)
  • Push clarity up to about 40. Helps brings out feathers
  • Increase Shadows by about one degree (+12 in Photoshop Elements). I tend to underexpose a touch to avoid images being blown out. Tweaking the shadows helps me bring the exposure up in post processing.
  • Minor crops of images to emphasize different features of photo (never use digital zoom)
  • Use “Auto Enhance Contrast”
  • Tweak “Shake Reduction” (photo needs to first be in focus for this edit to work)

As a reminder I use a basic monopod, and “never” shoot in Auto. I tend to first focus upon my subject using Aperture Priority to learn the camera’s desired shutter speed. I often then switch to Shutter Priority and expose at a slightly faster speed. With my Canon SX-70 because of the small sensor, I tend to select the minimum ISO of 100 (need good light). With my Sony A6300 I allow the camera to choose the ISO between 100 and 800. Remember, the lower the ISO … the higher the quality of the end image.