I'm not best pleased with this one; the sky is quite blown and I don't seem to be able to recover it, raw file or no raw file.
On the plus side, hey, I took a picture with intent—something I have not been good about doing these last several-six months—and it doesn't cause bleeding from the eyes. Since it started to rain roughly a second and a half after I took this picture, I also don't feel too bad about not getting another shot with better metering. (The K20D is weather sealed; the DA35 is not.)
"Birds" take because there is a great blue heron in the picture; I know where it is, so maybe I'm wrong that it's identifiable even in the quarter scale jpg.
24 October 2010
03 October 2010
TOC—Toronto Islands, late migrants and raptors
After a September plagued by poor timing, a bit of bronchitis, and badly-labeled ice-cream substitute (label claimed no soy; distraught innards asserted that, yes, yes there was soy in there), I finally got out on a Fall Migration walk.
Anyway -- having obtained the interesting bit of tech, I am also curious about how long a bird walk is; I can readily enough figure out how long the point-to-point distance would be, but this is so very rarely how it gets walked. So now I know for this one, how long, how fast, and what portion of the time spent moving. Plus, courtesy of gpx-viewer and Open Street Map, a spiffy map.
The best bird of the day was unquestionably a Le Conte's Sparrow; I missed it. (At the back, heading up slowly to the cluster staring at it on the airport fence; it flew about a tenth of second before I got it in focus.) Also, the day went from a spectacular sunrise in a sky with mixed cloud to clouds like a lid to drizzle to steady rain, which is not a source of great joy, no matter how carefully one has dressed for the possibility. (Which explains the early end and the departure from Center Island; usually, this walk leaves from Ward's.)
On the plus side, the traditional oodles of white-crowned sparrows were present; I got a good look at a pine warbler, and a very nice look at a black-throated green, which, to me, and especially in the misting rain, look like they were assembled by elvish jeweler's out of malachite and beryls; I may now understand how to differentiate the ruby-crowned and yellow-crowned kinglet in the fall (the ruby doesn't show any crest in the fall, the yellow-crowned does); the belted kingfisher on one of the inter-island waterways was still there and did a display flight, apparently just for us; a very plausible Cooper's hawk, several sharpies, a rousing argument about distinguishing Cooper's and Sharp-shinned, and a Northern Harrier; Dunlin, Sanderling, and Black-bellied Plover on the beach; and rusty blackbird and pied-billed grebe on the same small pond.
And, hey, not only did the GPS work, the available software for viewing GPX track files is uncomplicated and effective, which is a good thing to find out.
Labels:
bird walk,
birds,
PN-60,
Toronto Islands
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