Monday, January 30, 2012

Short-eared Owl

Another unexpected delight from our recent trip up to Boundary Bay Regional Park in Delta, BC, was our very first Short-Eared Owl sighting.


While our camera is pretty good, it's nothing like the amazing 500+ mm lenses many birding photographers use. We can only zoom to 150 mm, so this bird is actually pretty close to us and still a bit blurry. We were admiring him from afar when he took an interest to something in our area.


You may wonder what time of day we went birding at to see such an active owl. This was taken around 11 am. The Short-Eared Owl can actually be diurnal, making one of the few sometimes daytime owls. We were delighted to get a chance to see an owl actively hunting.


I want to give a shout out to our fellow birders for helping us see this owl. We were in touch with the tweeters (pre-twitter) community for advice prior to our trip north and I received an email alerting us to the presence of the Short-Ear while we were driving up. I kept my ear open and struck up a conversation with two more experienced birders who were looking for it and this lead to our successful sighting. I am really thankful to have such a good birding community in the Pacific Northwest.


Another interesting fun fact is that these birds are believed to only be day-hunters when voles are extremely active, which might be why he's hanging out with the Snowy Owls. No one has come up with a concrete theory as to why the snowies came south this year, but food source is the obvious choice, plus I like to point out that Alaska is having a particularly bad winter. I like to head south when the weather sucks, so why wouldn't the Snowy Owls? They don't even need a passport. Except in Hawaii.


Short-Eared Owl landing on a scouting spot.


Sunday, January 29, 2012

Sandhill Cranes

On January 28th, 2012, Michele and I went with a couple of friends up north to Boundary Bay just outside of Vancouver, BC to look for Snowy Owls (pictures of those soon!). On the way back, we stopped at Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary and saw an amazing number of shore birds, raptors, ducks, and many other birds up close. Here are the Sandhill Cranes we saw there.


The first ones were right next to the entrance, eating from a bucket on the side of the gift shop. They were very close and didn't seem to pay us much attention.


Posing for pictures
Sandhill Crane
Walking around the path we met some more. Because feeding birds is allowed here (very unusual for a bird sanctuary), these guys actually approached us to see if we had anything for them.


We've been sighted!
Posse on it's way
Sizing us up
"We're here. What'ya got?"
They got very close! In fact, we had to pass them to continue on our way. We've heard that Sandhill Cranes can get aggressive in these situations, so we had to pass very carefully. You can see that there isn't a lot of room on the path to get by.


Sandhill Crane
Beautiful!
Up close.
Passing the Cranes, observed.
So, I thought I'd video the passing. In it you can hear Michele say, "I'm worried it will attack you", and I reply, "I don't think it will." Nothing happened, but I'm sure those are always the last words of every crocodile wrestler.




So you can see we made it- whew!


Safely passed.