July 29th, 2021 Your Fave?
Which of today’s three featured images is your favorite. Please leave a comment and let us know why you made your choice.
What’s Up?
I finished packing on Wednesday morning and left early, headed for the Auto Train station in Sanford, FL, figuring I could nap on the way down if need be. I spent an hour on the phone with Cliff Beittel and that really helped pass the time. I arrived way early, boarded the train at 2:30, and we pulled out right on time at 4pm.
I was glad to learn that two spots for the Homer trip have been filled, that several folks are interested in joining me at JBWR, and that several others are setting up dates for Nickerson Beach In-the-Field Instruction. Good friend Bill Schneider will be joining me for two private days on the beach there 10 & 11 August. He has recovered well from his fairly recent shoulder surgery.
Kudos to American swimmer Katie Ledecky for her Gold Medal in the first-ever Olympic swim of the woman’s 1500 meter freestyle. And love and support for world’s greatest-of-all-time woman gymnast, American Simone Biles for withdrawing from the the team and the individual all-around competitions citing stress and mental issues. She said that she felt lost in the air … No-one, probably including Simone, knows if she will compete in the Event finals that are scheduled to begin on Sunday night. Learn more about this situation and this amazing young woman here in the great Sports Illustrated article by Stephanie Apstein.
I met some fun folks last night and we spent two hours telling stories and laughing. Loudly! David, the barman, hung out with us as well. He is a delightful man who is often confused with Morgan Freeman. When I saw his long thin fingers I asked if he played piano. He does. Then I asked if he had ever dunked (a basketball). He said that the had but that his favorite sport was baseball. He was looking forward to playing at the University of Maryland but injured a knee working a construction job. He has a great smile.
I slept seven fitful hours — understandable as the Auto Train gets up to seventy mph. It is now 6:40 am and we passed by Richmond, VA at about 6:15. I had a nice chat with David the barman about Motown, the Temptations, the Four Tops, Marvin Gaye, and Hitsville, USA. We are — barring anything unforeseen — looking at an-ahead-of-schedule arrival in Lorton, VA no later than 8:30am. I will head toward Nickerson Beach despite the dire weather forecast. I have a hotel room in Rockville Center for tonight, will try to do some photography this afternoon and Friday morning, and then head to Alissa’s house in Ronkonkoma (on Long Island). Wherever you are, and whatever you are doing, I hope that you too have a great day.
Remember that you can find some great photo accessories (and necessities!) on Amazon by clicking on the Stuff tab on the orange/yellow menu bar above. On a related note, it would be extremely helpful if blog-folks like me, who spend too much money on Amazon, would get in the habit of clicking on the Amazon logo link on the right side of each blog post. As you might expect, doing so will not cost you a single penny, but would be appreciated tremendously by yours truly. And it works seamlessly with your Amazon Prime account.
This blog post took about 90 minutes to prepare and makes 213 consecutive days with a new one. Please remember that if an item — a Delkin flash card, or a tripod head — for example, that is available from B&H and/or Bedfords, and is also available in the BAA Online Store, it would be great, and greatly appreciated if you would opt to purchase from us. We will match any price. Please remember also to use my B&H affiliate links or to save 3% at Bedfords by using the BIRDSASART discount code at checkout. Doing either often earns you free guides and/or discounts. And doing so always earns my great appreciation.
Homer Bald Eagles Winter 2022
Yes, this is an expensive (but competitively priced) trip. The price of the boat and the price of the fish have risen astronomically since my last visit in 2020. But the photography is beyond amazing. You can do the whole trip with either the Canon 100-500 or the SONY 200-600 along with any 70-200mm lens. Flight photography until you cannot raise your arms, creative set-ups, lots of snow, we hope (earlier in the season is best for that), and lots of opportunities for point-blank head portraits and talon shots. All is a spectacular setting. If you are seriously interested in joining me for the world’s best Homer/Kachemak Bay Bald Eagle trip(s) — mid-FEB thru early MARCH 2022, please contact me immediately via e-mail for dates and details. I am looking for a roommate who will be doing all eleven days.
The East Pond
The East Pond at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Queens, NY was the place to observe and photograph North America’s southbound migrant shorebirds. It shined from 1975 through about 2010. Then, for reasons noted in the blog post here, the place pretty much went down the tubes due to high water levels. At present, it seems that the folks at Gateway have gotten their act together; conditions at the pond are reported to be excellent this season. I have a strong connection to the East Pond. I photographed my first shorebird — a Semipalmated Sandpiper, there in August of 1983. I’ve been visiting for 45 years and have spent thousands of hours on the pond.
If you would like to learn to identify and photograph more than a dozen species of shorebirds on an In-the-Field Workshop in August, please shoot me an e-mail to learn the dates and details. The East Pond is best for photography for just three specific days in a calendar year … I will be there then. Here’s hoping that the East Pond will return to its former crown-jewel glory.
SONY a9 II Mirrorless Digital Camera Body
Super-Low Price!/Canadian Sale Only
BAA-friend and many multiple IPT veteran Anita North is offering a a Sony a9 II in excellent condition for a BAA record-low price in USD. The sale includes one battery and the charger, and insured ground shipping to Canadian addresses only. For price, and to get in touch with Anita, please contact artie via e-mail. The sooner the better, as she is leaving for Africa in mid-August.
As things worked out, the a9, and then the a9 ii, turned out to be life-changers for me. From the moment I tracked that first incoming Brandt’s Cormorant at LaJolla, I knew that at that time, the SONY a9 series bodies featured the world’ best AF. I upgraded to the a9 ii as soon as it was released for the slightly larger body size. At one point I owned two a9 ii bodies. A new a9 ii sells for $4,498.00 so you can save a very nice $2004.00 by grabbing Anita’s a9 ii ASAP. Not to mention that the new Sony A1 sells for $6498.00 … artie
Please Remember
With income from IPTs now close to zero, please, if you enjoy and learn from the blog, remember to use one of my two affiliate programs when purchasing new gear. Doing so just might make it possible for me to avoid having to try to get a job as a Walmart greeter and will not cost you a single penny more. And if you use Bedfords and remember to enter the BIRDSASART code at checkout, you will save 3% on every order and enjoy free second-day air shipping. In these crazy times — I am out at least forty to sixty thousand dollars so far due to COVID 19 (with lots more to come) — remembering to use my B&H link or to shop at Bedfords will help me out a ton and be greatly appreciated. Overseas folks who cannot order from the US because of import fees, duties, and taxes, are invited to help out by clicking here to leave a blog thank you gift if they see fit.
New and Better Bedfords Discount Policy!
You can now save 3% on all of your Bedfords photo gear purchases by entering the BIRDSASART coupon code at checkout. Your discount will be applied to your pre-tax total. In addition, by using the code you will get 2nd day air shipping via Fed Ex.
Grab a Nikon AF-S Teleconverter TC-14E III and save $14.99. Purchase a Canon EOS R5 and your discount will be $116.97. Purchase a Sony FE 600mm f/4 GM OSS lens and save a remarkable $389.94! Your Bedford’s purchase no longer needs to be greater than $1,000.00 for you to receive a discount. The more you spend, the more you save.
Money Saving Reminder
Many have learned that if you need a hot photo item that is out of stock at B&H and would enjoy free second-day air shipping, your best bet is to click here, place an order with Bedfords, and enter the coupon code BIRDSASART at checkout. If an item is out of stock, contact Steve Elkins via e-mail or on his cell phone at (479) 381-2592 (Central time). Be sure to mention the BIRDSASART coupon code and use it for your online order to save 3% and enjoy free 2nd-day air shipping. Steve has been great at getting folks the hot items that are out of stock at B&H and everywhere else. The wait lists at the big stores can be a year or longer for the hard to get items. Steve will surely get you your gear long before that. For the past year, he has been helping BAA Blog folks get their hands on items like the SONY a9 ii, the SONY 200-600 G OSS lens, the Canon EOS R5, the Canon RF 100-500mm lens, and the Nikon 500mm PF. Steve is personable, helpful, and eager to please.
Gear Questions and Advice
Too many folks attending BAA IPTs (remember those?) and dozens of photographers whom I see in the field and on BPN, are–out of ignorance–using the wrong gear, especially when it comes to tripods and more especially, tripod heads… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail
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This image was created on 28 May 2021 at a rookery in North Tampa. Standing, I used the hand held Sony FE 600mm f/4 GM OSS lens and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless digital camera. ISO 1000. Exposure determined via Zebras with ISO on the rear dial: 1/6400 sec. at f/5.6 (stopped down one-stop). AWB at 6:11pm on a cloudy bright afternoon.
Wide AF-C performed perfectly. Click on the image to enjoy a larger version.
Image #1: Little Blue Heron feeding fledged young
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600mm Alone
I’d had only one chance to photograph young Little Blue Herons near their nests in 38 years, that at St. Augustine Alligator Farm on film with flash about 25 years ago. So not often. But there were several nesting pairs at rookery in North Tampa. This image was made on my second visit. The visible eye of the young bird is a huge plus.
And the Question Is …
The question is, why was I at such a high shutter speed with a correspondingly high ISO?
Note: RawDigger showed a dead-solid perfect exposure for Image #1, a near-perfect exposure for Image #2, and a perfect exposure for Image #3.
600mm and the 1.4X TC
I mentioned this rocky limestone point in the 800+ Images of the Same Bird … Right Down the Barrel. Practice Fishing. And the Rocky Point blog post here. I was thrilled when this bird, just a few days out of the nest, landed and posed. Working at a good distance, I made lots of verticals. This one, nicely framed and with a perfect head angle, was the best of the lot. One thing that I need to do on rainy days on Long Island is to do final edits on many, many files and lose many thousands of images …
Images #2 and #3 of the same bird were created on my third and last visit to this great rookery.
600mm and the 2X TC
With birds that I have lots of images of, I will usually go for head shots right off the bat. But I refrained from doing that until I was sure that I had a nice vertical portrait of this handsome youngster. That done, I added the 2X, approached very slowly, and made the kill. Here again, the dead solid perfect head angle made this image the pick of the litter.
Controlling the BKGR via Perspective Choice
Image #2 and Image #3 are of the very same bird on the very same rock. For Image #2 I went for a green background by moving a bit to my right and getting a bit lower by pulling out the front leg of the tripod. I saw the chance for a grey, matte background for image #3 so I moved left and got as tall as possible. The background for that image is simply still water reflecting the lead-grey sky.
Typos
With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.
July 28th, 2021 The East Pond
The East Pond at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Queens, NY was the place to observe and photograph North America’s southbound migrant shorebirds from 1975 through about 2010. Then, for reasons noted below, the place pretty much went down the tubes due to high water levels. At present, it seems that the folks at Gateway have gotten their act together; conditions at the pond are reported to be excellent this season. As detailed below, I have a strong connection to the East Pond. I photographed my first shorebird — a Semipalmated Sandpiper, there in August of 1983. I’ve been visiting for 45 years and have spent thousands of hours on the pond.
If you would like to learn to identify and photograph more than a dozen species of shorebirds on an In-the-Field Workshop in August, please shoot me an e-mail to learn the dates and details. The East Pond is best for photography for just three specific days in a calendar year … I will be there then. Here’s hoping that the East Pond will return to its former crown-jewel glory.
Homer Bald Eagles Winter 2021
Yes, this is an expensive (but competitively priced) trip. The price of the boat and the price of the fish have risen astronomically since my last visit in 2020. But the photography is beyond amazing. Flight photography with any lens till you cannot raise your arms, creative set-ups, lots of snow, we hope (earlier in the season is best for that), and lots of opportunities for point-blank head portraits and talon shots. If you are seriously interested in joining me for the world’s best Homer/Kachemak Bay Bald Eagle trip(s) — mid-FEB thru early MARCH 2022, please contact me immediately via e-mail for dates and details.
What’s Up?
Thanks to the many who left kind comments on yesterday’s East Pond/JBWR history lesson. By Tuesday evening, I had all of my photo gear packed.
Today is Wednesday 28 July 2021. I still have lots of packing to do. I will be leaving ILE no later than 11:15 for the drive up to Sanford. You need to be checked in by 2:30. The train pulls out at 4pm and is scheduled to arrive in Lorton, Virginia at 9:00am on Thursday morning. Wherever you are, and whatever you are doing, I hope that you too have a great day.
Remember that you can find some great photo accessories (and necessities!) on Amazon by clicking on the Stuff tab on the orange/yellow menu bar above. On a related note, it would be extremely helpful if blog-folks like me, who spend too much money on Amazon, would get in the habit of clicking on the Amazon logo link on the right side of each blog post. As you might expect, doing so will not cost you a single penny, but would be appreciated tremendously by yours truly. And it works seamlessly with your Amazon Prime account.
This blog post took about 90 minutes to prepare and makes 212 consecutive days with a new one. Please remember that if an item — a Delkin flash card, or a tripod head — for example, that is available from B&H and/or Bedfords, and is also available in the BAA Online Store, it would be great, and greatly appreciated if you would opt to purchase from us. We will match any price. Please remember also to use my B&H affiliate links or to save 3% at Bedfords by using the BIRDSASART discount code at checkout. Doing either often earns you free guides and/or discounts. And doing so always earns my great appreciation.
Please Remember
With income from IPTs now close to zero, please, if you enjoy and learn from the blog, remember to use one of my two affiliate programs when purchasing new gear. Doing so just might make it possible for me to avoid having to try to get a job as a Walmart greeter and will not cost you a single penny more. And if you use Bedfords and remember to enter the BIRDSASART code at checkout, you will save 3% on every order and enjoy free second-day air shipping. In these crazy times — I am out at least forty to sixty thousand dollars so far due to COVID 19 (with lots more to come) — remembering to use my B&H link or to shop at Bedfords will help me out a ton and be greatly appreciated. Overseas folks who cannot order from the US because of import fees, duties, and taxes, are invited to help out by clicking here to leave a blog thank you gift if they see fit.
New and Better Bedfords Discount Policy!
You can now save 3% on all of your Bedfords photo gear purchases by entering the BIRDSASART coupon code at checkout. Your discount will be applied to your pre-tax total. In addition, by using the code you will get 2nd day air shipping via Fed Ex.
Grab a Nikon AF-S Teleconverter TC-14E III and save $14.99. Purchase a Canon EOS R5 and your discount will be $116.97. Purchase a Sony FE 600mm f/4 GM OSS lens and save a remarkable $389.94! Your Bedford’s purchase no longer needs to be greater than $1,000.00 for you to receive a discount. The more you spend, the more you save.
Money Saving Reminder
Many have learned that if you need a hot photo item that is out of stock at B&H and would enjoy free second-day air shipping, your best bet is to click here, place an order with Bedfords, and enter the coupon code BIRDSASART at checkout. If an item is out of stock, contact Steve Elkins via e-mail or on his cell phone at (479) 381-2592 (Central time). Be sure to mention the BIRDSASART coupon code and use it for your online order to save 3% and enjoy free 2nd-day air shipping. Steve has been great at getting folks the hot items that are out of stock at B&H and everywhere else. The wait lists at the big stores can be a year or longer for the hard to get items. Steve will surely get you your gear long before that. For the past year, he has been helping BAA Blog folks get their hands on items like the SONY a9 ii, the SONY 200-600 G OSS lens, the Canon EOS R5, the Canon RF 100-500mm lens, and the Nikon 500mm PF. Steve is personable, helpful, and eager to please.
Gear Questions and Advice
Too many folks attending BAA IPTs (remember those?) and dozens of photographers whom I see in the field and on BPN, are–out of ignorance–using the wrong gear, especially when it comes to tripods and more especially, tripod heads… Please know that I am always glad to answer your gear questions via e-mail
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This image was created on 10 July 2021 in our butterfly garden in the back front yard. Standing at full height, I used the Induro GIT304L Grand Series 3 Stealth Carbon Fiber Tripod/Levered-Clamp FlexShooter Mini-mounted Canon EF 180mm f/3.5L Macro USM lens with the Metabones Canon EF/EF-S Lens to Sony E Mount T Smart Adapter (Fifth Generation) and The One, the Sony Alpha 1 Mirrorless Digital camera body. ISO 800. The exposure was in part determined by Zebras with Exposure Compensation on the rear wheel, and then selected as best from a bracketed series of exposures after evaluation in RawDigger. Multi-metering +1.3 stops: 1/13 sec. at f/8 (stopped down 2 1/3 stops) in Manual mode. Manual Focus, Focus Magnifier, Focus Peaking, and the 2-second self-timer, all as detailed in the SONY Alpha a1 Info and Updates group e-mails. AWB at 7:33am on a still, cloudy morning. I pinned the tall stem of the plant with the leg of a spare tripod to keep the blossom still.
Be sure to click on the image to view a larger version.
Image #1: Scarlet Rosemallow (Hibiscus coccineus) native
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Abstract Flower Center: Any Better?
My last attempt at an abstract flower center image was universally scorned 🙂 You can see that image in the blog post here and below.
Even I like this one a lot better. These plants grow to more than three feet tall. The biggest one in our garden is more than four feet tall. On our recent trip to Lake Woodruff for the Swallow-tailed Kites we saw lots of these blooming in very wet woods along the canals. As the pool cage was in the background I got in really tight — these are large flowers, and angled in from one side to keep the tip of the stamen (the tall thing in the middle) out of the image …
What Do You Think of Image #1 (above) ?
What do you like about it?
What don’t you like?
Trashed!
Nearly all who commented on this image trashed it, perhaps rightly so. I was not thrilled with the overall look of the image, but … See below for But …
Cliff Beittel left this insightful comment:
I’ve never had much success myself with shallow DOF on flowers, but I’ve seen many such images that were beautiful, even at f/2.8. The problem here, for me, is that the sharp stigma are surrounded by the very soft stamen of similar color. The out-of-focus pink petal I like. So perhaps one frame of the stigma and stamen at f22 or f32 blended with another of the petal at f14 or even wider?
Love this species. Had one in our backyard at our old house.
When Cliff mentioned that the sharp stigma was surrounded by the soft stamens of similar color, I realized that he hit the nail on the head. Some rosemallows have darker stigma … Had I found one of those species, a similar image might work a lot better …
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Click on the image to view a larger, seemingly even sharper version.
Image #2A: a tight crop of the Swamp Rosemallow Hibiscus grandiflorus blossom
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But …
Several folks commented that the image was not sharp. A quick look at the Image 2A, a tight crop of the stigma (I think), reveals that it is sharp where I wanted to be sharp. To me, it looks exceptionally sharp, especially considering the shutter speed: 1/3 second! One commenter stated that the highlights were blown out. The brightest part of the image was the lower left corner. There was nothing even close to being over-exposed. That said, I did not like the glare on the petal in that corner of the image.
Typos
With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.
July 27th, 2021 The East Pond
The East Pond at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Queens, NY was the place to observe and photograph North America’s southbound migrant shorebirds from 1975 through about 2010. Then, for reasons noted below, the place pretty much went down the tubes due to high water levels. At present, it seems that the folks at Gateway have gotten their act together; conditions at the pond are reported to be excellent this season. As detailed below, I have a strong connection to the East Pond. I photographed my first shorebird — a Semipalmated Sandpiper, there in August of 1983. I’ve been visiting for 45 years and have spent thousands of hours on the pond.
If you would like to learn to identify and photograph more than a dozen species of shorebirds on an In-the-Field Workshop in August, please shoot me an e-mail to learn the dates and details. The East Pond is best for photography for just three specific days in a calendar year … I will be there then. Here’s hoping that the East Pond will return to its former crown-jewel glory.
Homer Bald Eagles Winter 2021
Yes, this is an expensive (but competitively priced) trip. The price of the boat and the price of the fish have risen astronomically since my last visit in 2020. But the photography is beyond amazing. Flight photography with any lens till you cannot raise your arms, creative set-ups, lots of snow, we hope (earlier in the season is best for that), and lots of opportunities for point-blank head portraits and talon shots. If you are seriously interested in joining me for the world’s best Homer/Kachemak Bay Bald Eagle trip(s) — mid-FEB thru early MARCH 2022, please contact me immediately via e-mail for dates and details.
What’s Up?
I need to do a bit more laundry, charge camera batteries, and begin packing for Wednesday afternoon’s trip on the Auto Train. Next will be a seven hour drive to Ronkonkoma on Long Island where I will be staying with daughter Alissa and her husband, Ajiniyaz. I will probably stop for the night at a Staten Island chain hotel to avoid the BQE and the LIE during rush hour! I will be photographing often at Nickerson Beach and at Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge.
Today is Tuesday 27 July 2021 and I have lots of work to do. Wherever you are, and whatever you are doing, I hope that you too have a great day.
Remember that you can find some great photo accessories (and necessities!) on Amazon by clicking on the Stuff tab on the orange/yellow menu bar above. On a related note, it would be extremely helpful if blog-folks like me, who spend too much money on Amazon, would get in the habit of clicking on the Amazon logo link on the right side of each blog post. As you might expect, doing so will not cost you a single penny, but would be appreciated tremendously by yours truly. And it works seamlessly with your Amazon Prime account.
This blog post took about three hours to prepare and makes 211 consecutive days with a new one. Please remember that if an item — a Delkin flash card, or a tripod head — for example, that is available from B&H and/or Bedfords, and is also available in the BAA Online Store, it would be great, and greatly appreciated if you would opt to purchase from us. We will match any price. Please remember also to use my B&H affiliate links or to save 3% at Bedfords by using the BIRDSASART discount code at checkout. Doing either often earns you free guides and/or discounts. And doing so always earns my great appreciation.
Getting Started Birding at JBWR
In May of probably 1977, I went birding, really for the first time, with my then and now former wife Dana, and my two daughters, Jennifer and Alissa. I had along a copy of the Golden Field Guide, Guide to Birds of North America by Chandler S. Robbins and Bertel Bruun. I learned years later that it had been a wave day as dozens of Myrtle (now Yellow-rumped) Warblers in breeding plumage flitted about in the trees and shrubs. I can remember being thrilled when I was able to match the color and patterns of the tiny birds in the tall bushes with the painting in the book. I had a pair of lousy binoculars that my Dad had gotten sometime in WW II. They were terrible at best.
That August I visited the refuge on my own and checked the log. One of the entries listed American Kestrel, male in the log. I found the bird in my now trust companion, the Golden Guide. A blue and orange falcon in New York City? You gotta be kidding me. I walked around the West Pond, saw a male American Kestrel, and followed it blindly when it flew between two rows of tall trees halfway around the pond. I got a better look at the bird when I was startled by a horn honking. A ranger, who later became a good friend — Bob Cook, called me over and explained that I had gone past a Do Not Enter sign. I apologized and we chatted. He said to me, “If you want to get close to the birds, check out the East Pond across Cross Bay Boulevard. There are no restrictions there.”
The next morning I was on the pond early and spotted a large, cinnamon-colored shorebird, a Marbled Godwit. As I wrote in Shorebirds; Beautiful Beachcombers and elsewhere, I had no idea that seeing that single bird would change the course of the remainder of my adult life, but that is exactly what happened. I had been captivated by the godwit’s long, upturned bill with an alabaster pink base. Shorebirds would quickly become my favorite bird family and I wound up spending several thousand hours on the East Pond over the next two plus decades.
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The late Thomas H. Davis Jr. and Suzanne Kleinbaum at a Guy Tudor Christmas party in 1974.
Photo courtesy of Peter W. Post
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My Shorebird Mentor, the late Tom Davis
As a beginning birder, Tom Davis was a mysterious, mythical figure to me. All 6 foot seven inches and 145 pounds of him. He was an extremely knowledgeable top-notch birder, and served as the voice of the New York Rare Bird Alert. For several years I walked by him on the shores of the drawn-down East Pond looking for and studying shorebirds. He never once glanced at me. Tom often had a huge Novoflex telephoto lens with him. It had two pistol-like handle grips that were used to focus. Anyhoo, one day, for no reason at all, I walked by him and he said, “Hey, Artie, how’s it going?” I almost fainted. Within minutes he was down in the mud drawing stick figures of Baird’s Sandpiper for me and giving me lots of birding tips. When we got back to the parking lot, he shared his baby picture album with me. His babies were the juvenile shorebirds that visit the pond beginning in mid-August each year.
High as a kite, I went home and excitedly told Dana that Tom Davis had talked to me. The next week when I saw him he walked by me without saying a word. Over time, we talked a lot and Tom taught me everything that I know about aging shorebirds, separating juveniles from adult and breeding and winter plumage. Sometime in early 1984, I believe, Tom suffered a crippling cerebral aneurism in a doctor’s office. He became hemiplegic, completely paralyzed on one side. I visited him often at his care facility in Far Rockaway. In 1985, I was blessed to find and identify New York State’s first Red-necked (then Rufous-necked) Stint on the East Pond in July of 1985. Several of Tom’s friends took him by stretcher to the East Pond to see the bird. On his first attempt, the bird could not be located. He returned soon afterwards and saw the bird.
I was in California during the summer of 1986. I called the Rare Bird Alert to make sure that I was not missing any rare birds at the East Pond. Birding friend Tom Burke had taken over the alert when Tom Davis was stricken. As soon as I heard Tom intone in a very sad voice, “This is the New York Rare Bird Alert for July 20 …’ I knew that Tom had died. The stint had been his last life bird.
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artie in the mud at the East Pond, Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge, Queens, NY
Original film image (slide) courtesy of the late Max Larsen
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The East Pond and artie
Inspired by Tom Davis’s baby shorebird images and moved to action when I attended a Tony Manzoni slide show at South Shore Audubon Society, I began photographing birds at the East Pond in the later summer of 1983. I had no clue. The late Max and Nellie Larsen were very kind to me when I was a beginning birder. Max was quite a handsome man with a shock of Roger-Tory-Peterson-like white hair. Max took this image of me at the East Pond and kindly shared the slide with me. I spoke to Nellie at least five years ago. Max had been gone for a few years and she was well into her nineties.
In the photo above I am using my first telephoto lens, the Canon 400mm f/4.5 FD manual focus lens. The only way to get close enough for a decent image was to crawl through the mud. Tom had been doing a shorebird survey at JBWR for about five years when he was stricken. The results were published each year in The Kingbird, the journal of the then Federation of New York State Bird Clubs (now the more prestigious New York State Ornithological Association). Here is a link to Tom’s 1983 article. I took over the survey, done for the then-Manomet Bird Observatory, in 1984. I did the survey each fall through the 1990 season, the last several years with help from good friend and now professional ornithologist David Mizrahi. By 1991, I was totally obsessed with bird photography and stepped away from the many hundreds of hours needed to do the survey. I needed more time for photography. For the curious, here is a link to the 1986 survey.
Beginning in 1983, I photographed regularly at the East Pond with friends Kevin Karlson, Rob Villani, the late Tom Vezo, and Johann Schumacher. Those, as they say, were the days. While you would never think of the NYC metropolitan area as a hotbed of nature photography, everyone above and yours truly went on to become noted, oft-published bird photographers. I would be remiss at this point to not give a shout-out to former refuge manager Don Riepe. So thanks for everything, Don! And the same could be said of the late Bob Elliot Kutner, founding member and past President of the South Shore Audobon Society. I just learned that Elliot was an heroic WWII veteran who was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross. Bob led countless birding field trips with boundless and infectious enthusiasm. And he hooked countless folks — including me, on birding. He showed me my first Snowy Owl. At a desolate Jones Beach on winter days, I used to say that you could tell that Elliot was leading a bird walk when you felt the ground shake from the hundred or so folks that he had enticed into the field despite the frigid weather. The man had the most wonderful smile you could ever hope to encounter. Bob lived to 88. This from his obituary that I found this morning:
He was a special, kind, charitable, man deeply connected to his Jewish roots. He will be missed by the many lives he touched and loved in his 88 years. His enthusiasm for life was exceptional and contagious. Our lives will never be the same without him. I was blessed to know have known him.
Back to the subject of rare shorebirds at JBWR. In 1981 Tom Davis found New York State’s first Sharp-tailed Sandpiper, an adult, on the East Pond. Two summers later he sighted what he believed to be the same bird! In 1983, Tom found a strange sandpiper that was definitively identified by noted Avian artist John Yrizarry as New York State’s first Little Stint. There was confusion at the time as to whether the bird was a Rufous-necked Stint or a Little Stint. I was there when John spoke to Tom after reviewing study skins of the two species at the American Museum of Natural History. He said, in his heavy Eastern-European accent, “It’s a shtint, alright, but is a Little Shtint.” I saw that bird several time but never had a chance to photograph it.
By chance, I was visiting Long Island in the late summer of 1998 and was privileged to see and photograph a juvenile Broad-billed Sandpiper. The bird, a real North American rarity, was found on the East Pond by William Brenner. It was the first record of that species in the lower 48 states. Tom Davis used to say that if you lived long enough every migrant shorebird in the world would wind up being seen at the East Pond …
It was on a Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge IPT that I first met Patrick Sparkman, now a dear friend.
Over the past decade, I have visited the East Pond in August several times. But because of problems with the water control valve at the north end of the pond, combined with management indifference, the pond was almost always completely flooded; there was usually no place for any shorebirds to land. My understanding is that this year the valve has been repaired and conditions should be ideal for the entire southbound shorebird migration season.
While doing the research for this blog post I found a searchable archive for the Kingbird (1950-2018) here on the website of the New York State Ornithological Association. Each mouse-click brought back memories of old friends from my NYC birding days: Paul A. Buckley, Joe Di Costanzo, Thomas W. Burke, Manny Levine, Robert Villani, Kevin and Dale Karlson, Tom Hook, Georges Dremeaux, Rick Cech, Stephen B. Dempsey, Arthur Berland, Steve Walters, R. J. Kurtz, Tony Leukering, and too many more to list. It was a real trip down memory lane.
Scroll to What’s Up (above) if you would like to explore the possibility of joining me on the East Pond this August for some In-the-Field photographic and shorebirding instruction.
Typos
With all blog posts, feel free to e-mail or to leave a comment regarding any typos or errors.
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