19 May 2010

Oriental Reed Warblers


An Oriental Reed Warbler singing next to the river near my apartment this afternoon. This is a common summer visitor, on the 2KM stretch of river (in the middle of town) there are usually about 10-12 singing males every summer.







They are normally pretty shy but today 2 males were squabbling over territory (ie fighting over who gets to sing from the top of the coolest tree) and didn't pay me much attention.







They have a very noisy song and it was one of the typical sounds of summer in Hakodate.










The vegetation is growing visibly by the day and soon they will be nesting.

I took a wobbly handheld video, the camera's internal mic picked up more wind than birdsong alas. If I was serious about video I would be using my tripod and would have invested in an external mic by now................


I got up early this morning after one of the people I teach told me she'd seen some odd looking birds flying over the sea near her apartment. About the size of sparrows, all flying in unison, sometimes landing on the water to feed. they could only have been Pharalopes. I went down to the bay area where she'd seem them yesterday but there was nothing doing...............

My wife also showed me a newspaper cutting of a Yellow Browed Bunting (a pretty rare visitor) in  a local park a couple of weeks ago.................

I can rely on the Red Cheeked Starlings any time though.







The cherry blossoms are starting to fall, soon the background will be green instead of pink or white.













And here's a wobbly handheld video I took of the Starlings. It is really hard to hold a heavy 400mm lens still whilst looking at the screen on the back of a camera............


A few days ago the last batch of migrants were passing through. This Asian Brown Flycatcher got me thinking of Sooty Flycatcher as it appeared a little darker and scruffier than most of the Asian Browns I see. But it when I got home and looked at the pics it wasn't a Sooty at all.







It was sharing a clump of trees/bushed with a female Blue and White Flycatcher, an Eastern Crowned Warbler, a Sakhalin Leaf Warbler, 2 pairs of Red Cheeked Starlings and a pair of Black Faced Buntings. the latter species seems commoner than ever this spring, there are 4 or 5 singing males on the river. They are real skulkers though, here's one from today.




It's going to rain tomorrow so on Friday I need to be pro-active and go out there and find me some Red Necked Pharalopes. Some springs they are abundant and tens (or even hundreds) of thousands of birds pass Hakodate. Usually they are well offshore (you can see them with the naked eye though). I'd love for some to come close enough inshore to photograph.........

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***Once again I'm having problems with publishing comments. On my dashboard it keeps telling me I have comments to publish but when I click the link it says there aren't any....................mysterious.

If you've left a comment and it hasn't appeared I apologise.

This blog is free so I can't really complain................but hey, someone,  sort it out!***

17 May 2010

Red Cheeked Starlings in the cherry blossoms





Some male Red Cheeked Starlings in Goryokaku Park.

I spent the last couple of mornings watching a small colony of Red Cheeked Starlings in a very handy location in the main park in town and despite the crowds I got some nice pictures.............











The cherry blossoms were rather late this year and perhaps in most springs this scene doesn't happen so often...............










As you can see the females are a little dull by comparison but they still have their charms............










But most of the time I was concentrating on the males......










I took lots of shots..................................occasionally they did something a little interesting.........




They were nestbuilding...............







A very photogenic bird you have to admit..................













My wife had found the tree with these Starlings on Saturday. We could stand on the old ramparts (the park used to be a fort) and look at the tree top at more or less eye level.

On the day my wife found them there were lots of White-eyes in the park but by the time I got there on Sunday most had gone and I didn't get any shots. 

This morning I was very surprised to see 3 Grey Tailed Tattlers in the park flying around the moat looking for somewhere to land................I couldn't get a photo of them though.




The light was very good, the sun was behind me and I was down at ISO 200 or even 100 most of the time.







When they left the trees I couldn't afford such luxuries.........




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The last post's pics may look a little odd because I forgot to change the colour profile to sRGB. On some browsers/monitors the colours will appear dull and washed out.............I'm a tad lazy and I can't be a***d to go back and change it now..................



16 May 2010

A spring Sunday in Hokkaido


A pair of Red Cheeked Starlings near Yakumo this afternoon, the background is a mishmash of old fishing nets and stinky port stuff.

We got up very early and took lots of pics of this species near my apartment in amongst the cherry blossoms, I'll post those pics tomorrow................

It was warm today and there was an odd mix of winter and summer birds.




These were part of a flock of a hundred or so White Fronted Geese that briefly landed in the soon to be flooded ricefields in Ono. When they flew off I turned the dial on my 7D to 'B' instead of 'C1' (my BIF setting). 'B' is for long exposures, I messed up there.

Cuckoo, Oriental and Black Browed Reed Warbler, Siberian Stonechat, Skylark and Chestnut Eared Bunting were in the same area.

At Yakumo there were still Scaup, Black Scoter and Red Breasted Merganser offshore and elsewhere today we also saw Pintail, Shoveler and Pochard. A few Glaucous Gull were at Yakumo but the most interesting bird of the day was this, an Eastern Marsh Harrier. Here's a record shot.




Not a vintage BIF day at all. Ospreys continue to resist all attempts to get a decent pic...........




At least Black Kites fly closer.




I was hoping for some waders at Yakumo but we only saw Little Ringed Plover, the first Lathams Snipe of the year and Grey Tailed Tattler. The Red Cheeked Starlings were common here too though........







We ended up at Onuma, lots of stuff in the forest as per usual but nothing posing for the camera.

Like Ospreys, Mandarin Ducks avoid my camera........




I'm knackered and am hitting the sack, I'll sort through my Starlings in the cherry blossom shots tomorrow........

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