Friday, March 30, 2018

Goatsuckers

Hundreds of years ago, when people came across weirdly patterned and shaped birds in the forest, they were at a loss to imagine what they were and how they got their food. After all, they slept all day and no one ever saw them hunt. So the only conjecture they could make was that - of course! - they must've been sucking blood from goats in the night. Hence, they collectively became known as Goatsuckers.

Today, we know that they feed by hunting insects in the night, and their collective name is Nightjars (sometimes nighthawks).

Few people see them perching. I came across this Common Nighthawk in my trip through Oregon. There was a campground full of them. I first noticed suspicious rocks lying on the road alongside it, and turned around to see them flying up. That led me to the campground where most of them roosted.
Common Nighthawk

This is the typical view of a nighthawk. The horizontal strips across the wings are a field mark for them:
Common Nighthawk (in flight)

Common Paraque, a nightjar from Central America and south Texas (which is where we got it):
Common Pauraque

One of the smallest nightjars, called a Common Poorwill. The name derives from the sound that it makes. This one was on a remote road in the mountains of southern Arizona. The head is so big to accommodate its eyes. Just like an owl, it has to be able to see the smallest things moving around at night:
Common Poorwill

This is the one that started them all - the original Nightjar from Europe. I came across it purely by chance in Italy. You can see how they evolved to mask themselves as a stubby tree branch during the day:
European Nightjar (Italy)

Another Common Nighthawk, also found by chance, but in a very public place - path to a Sandy Hook beach:
Common Nighthawk 2

Their bills are tiny, but their gape actually extends all the way to the eyes, so their mouths can open very wide to get that night insect:
Common Nighthawk (in flight) 2

Another Common Paraque. If you didn't know where to look, you'll never notice it even if it was right next to you. This one was pointed out to us by a park ranger in Texas:
Common Pauraque 2

An active Buff-Bellied Nightjar from southern Arizona:
Buff-Bellied Nightjar

Sunday, March 25, 2018

Sandy Hook and Cape May

Sunrise in Cape May:

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This is Bobbert - a semi-tame Northern Bobwhite (which is a small quail), one of the few released in Cape May recently:
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Cape May - Lewes ferry:
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Eastern Rate Snake:
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Eastern Box Turtle:
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Sandy Hook - view of Coney Island's parachute tower behind an osprey nest (with an osprey on it!)
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Swallows in Sandy Hook, with Manhattan skyline in the distance:
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There are thousands of swallows massing in Cape May during the fall migration months:
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And here is the possible reason the swallows are up in the air - a Peregrine Falcon. Peregrines follow migrating birds (their food) and migrate south with them.
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Cedar Waxwing:
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Young Northern Mockingbird:
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Young Song Sparrow:
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Black-and-White Warbler:
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An osprey nest on top of an old Fort Hancock building in Sandy Hook:
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Friday, March 16, 2018

Western US birds

Great Horned Owl:

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California Quail:
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Common Nighthawk:
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Burrowing Owl:
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... and Burrowing Owlets:
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Swainson's Hawk:
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Another California Quail:
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Burrowing Owl again:
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Western Meadowlark:
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Great Blue Heron:
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Rock Wren:
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Sunday, March 11, 2018

Things that made my day

The Denver Bear:

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Just your typical Manhattan morning commute:
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Even Frank Lloyd Wright made notes on napkins:
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Only in MOMA bathrooms:
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MOMA tickets showcase: Toulouse Lautrec and Studio Ghibli:
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In Charlotte airport:
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Last flight of the United's 747:
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And the new generation:
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Cape May lighthouse:
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Denver sunrise:
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