Monday, August 15, 2016

Songbirds

Brown thrashers arrive in spring and make a lot of noise, some of it  mimicry.


Thrasher


Dickcissel




Dickcissels and meadowlarks (last pic), noisiest birds on the prairie.



We don't have very many nesting warblers, a few more in Omaha, so have to include this Waterthrush as a singer.


Baltimore Oriole. Chatters a lot with offspring, as well as singing.




Wood thrush in our Eastern end.


Red eyed vireo, a noisy bird in much of our country. Song often mistaken for a Robin.


Eastern bluebird, on its nestbox. Male sings, both male and female colorful.


Orange and black American Redstart. Nests in Northern Nebraska along rivers.


One of our more common, but pretty, warblers. Yellow warbler.


Of course we have goldfinches. here sitting in a tree with their enemy, a merlin.


Mostly a dark blob with a tweezer for a bill, the House Wren is bubbling with song, sometimes a bird every 100 feet or so along a path. This is actually at Lincoln Saline Wetland that has a tiny bit of trees, a sort of Nebraska forest.  Also at the wetland. bushes along the gravel road are home to:


Bell's Vireo. Sings all summer. He never looked my way while singing, Some sort of  choke cherry bush.


Wetland Birds

Birds of wetlands other than ducks and shorebirds. This Ibis was near Tamora NE.


There was a group of 6-8.


Coots at Holmes Lake


Snowy Egret, Pioneer's Park


Sometimes you get gulls and ducks, but in shallow water, just the shore birds.


Black-crowned night heron


Sandhill cranes


It's a Whooping Crane. The camera I had was not very good.




American White Pelicans, both pictures. Nests in Dakotas on remote puddles.




Around wetlands, sometimes in the cattails itself, you find Marsh Wren. As well as the sedge wren, which may also nest on drier meadows.


Sedge wren, Frank Shoemaker marsh.


Flying low over wetlands, Forster's tern. Also on migration, we get black tern, no photo located.








Shorebirds

These are best to catch in spring, though there is a fall migration too.



Avocets, godwits


Godwit


Phalarope


A bit distant..yellowlegs.


Try your ID skills


Of the "peeps", 7 inch sandpipers, the ones with black legs are semipalmated sandpipers.


Summer resident in most streams, spotted sandpiper


A good size shorebird, Wilson's snipe are around most of the year, though the nesting birds are in the North half of the state. 

Snipe with migrant Dowitcher and Dunlin. Jack Sinn East area.


Snipe, dowitcher. Most dowitchers are long billed, with short-billed seen for one week in May.


Solitary sandpiper with the bold eye ring.



American Golden Plover nonbreeding plumage, two of the same bird.




Some photos 2016

I take the camera along mostly for ID purposes. But a few photos came out well in 2016. Click the photo to get a proper view.


A yellow-headed black bird near downtown Lincoln in a wetland area.


Great Horned Owl, south end of Wilderness park.


Pair of wood ducks


Grebes found by Larry Einemann at Branched Oak.





Plovers and sandpipers at Constoga lake, spring. Includes Piping Plover.


Scarlet Tanager, Platte River SP in May