Page 116 of 162
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2022 6:05 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From February 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #1, #5, #7 & #10).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Thu Jul 14, 2022 10:15 pm
by Dinadan
treefarmer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 14, 2022 1:40 pm
What kind of a bird do y'all bird watchers think this one is?
WGI_0261.JPG
I have no idea what it is sitting on or is it beginning to land? As there is nothing in front of the camera.
Treefarmer
I am not at all certain, but I will hazard a guess. Chuck-will's-widow. Very cool photo, Treefarmer. You keep the area under that feeder neater than my back yard!
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2022 12:17 am
by treefarmer
Dinadan wrote: ↑Thu Jul 14, 2022 10:15 pm
treefarmer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 14, 2022 1:40 pm
What kind of a bird do y'all bird watchers think this one is?
WGI_0261.JPG
I have no idea what it is sitting on or is it beginning to land? As there is nothing in front of the camera.
Treefarmer
I am not at all certain, but I will hazard a guess. Chuck-will's-widow. Very cool photo, Treefarmer. You keep the area under that feeder neater than my back yard!
Might be.

Very few few folks are aware of the Chuck-will’s-widow, they say Whip-poor-will. I’ve spotted Chuck-will’s-widow just a few times in my 75+ years. Never flying, always sitting on branchs in thick oak scrubs.
Always something interesting on the trail cameras.
Treefarmer
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2022 1:37 am
by Dinadan
treefarmer wrote: ↑Fri Jul 15, 2022 12:17 am
Dinadan wrote: ↑Thu Jul 14, 2022 10:15 pm
treefarmer wrote: ↑Thu Jul 14, 2022 1:40 pm
What kind of a bird do y'all bird watchers think this one is?
WGI_0261.JPG
I have no idea what it is sitting on or is it beginning to land? As there is nothing in front of the camera.
Treefarmer
I am not at all certain, but I will hazard a guess. Chuck-will's-widow. Very cool photo, Treefarmer. You keep the area under that feeder neater than my back yard!
Might be.

Very few few folks are aware of the Chuck-will’s-widow, they say Whip-poor-will. I’ve spotted Chuck-will’s-widow just a few times in my 75+ years. Never flying, always sitting on branchs in thick oak scrubs.
Always something interesting on the trail cameras.
Treefarmer
Treefarmer, when you were a boy did anyone ever point out
bull bats? About sixty years ago my Dad and I would see them flitting around the pecans and oak trees at the edge of our pasture just at dusk and that is what he called them. It was long after I was an adult and avid birder that I realized that those
bull bats were actually Chuck-will's-widows.
I have not seen one flying in decades, but I do not live in a good place to see them. I have seen a couple sitting on the ground over the years - not many.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2022 2:58 am
by treefarmer
I do remember the “bull bats” and the unforgettable noise they make when they dove toward the ground. Come to think of it, we haven’t heard or seen one in years. Like you said, they would fly above a field right before dark. We still hear them call after dark in the early spring and again not near as many as we used to hear.
Along the same line of thought, Quail (Northern Bob Whites) are very scarce anymore. We used to see them all the time, pairs early in the spring and then in coveys in late summer and fall. Row crops were replaced with planted pines and we lost habitat for the quail. I’ve heard them calling several times in the last couple of weeks but not very many.
There is so much to see and hear in creation if we would just pay attention!
Treefarmer
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Fri Jul 15, 2022 11:18 am
by Quick Steel
Joe, you did a great job of cropping with that Red-Winged Blackbird.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Sun Jul 17, 2022 2:15 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From February 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #2, #3 & #6).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Tue Jul 19, 2022 2:05 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From March 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #2, #3, #5 & #7).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Thu Jul 21, 2022 3:22 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From March 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Sat Jul 23, 2022 3:30 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From April 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not picture #2).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2022 3:35 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From April 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #1, #4 & #5).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Fri Jul 29, 2022 5:52 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From May 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #3, #4 & #5).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Sat Jul 30, 2022 4:30 pm
by Dinadan
treefarmer wrote: ↑Fri Jul 15, 2022 2:58 am
I do remember the “bull bats” and the unforgettable noise they make when they dove toward the ground.
Treefarmer
Your comment made me remember something else from back then. We had the Chuck-wills, but we also had Nighthawks.

- Common Nighthawk
They would be flying at dusk just like the Chuck-wills. My Dad called both birds
bull bats, but the Chuck-wills have more rounded wings. I still see Nighthawks occasionally in the summer: they are okay with city living and will nest on flat roofs that have gravel surfaces. I no longer hear the
meep call of the Nighthawks, or the kind of roar as they dive. Maybe too much tinnitus.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Sat Jul 30, 2022 5:51 pm
by doglegg
Mel, there are 3 that frequent the school and park across the street from my house. About dusk they start working the lights. Love to watch them. And can they dive!
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Sat Jul 30, 2022 6:06 pm
by Quick Steel
When I was in grade school I used to go up to the roof of the apartment where we lived for a couple of years and at dusk watch the Nighthawks dive and boom. Very common at the time. Hope they still are.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Mon Aug 01, 2022 1:42 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From May 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #2, #3 & #5).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Wed Aug 03, 2022 4:30 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From May 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #2, #3 & #4).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Thu Aug 04, 2022 7:00 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From June 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not pictures #3 & #4).
SOME INFORMATION FROM WIKIPEDIA REGARDING PICTURE #1.....
"Francis Townsend Dodd (October 5, 1899 – March 5, 1973) was a U.S. Army brigadier general held hostage by North Korean POWs during a camp uprising when he was commander of the United Nations-administered prisoner-of-war camps on Koje Island during the Korean War. The incident led to a North Korean propaganda victory after the Army was forced to make embarrassing admissions to secure Dodd's release. Dodd and others involved in the incident subsequently suffered career-ending damage to their reputations."
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Sun Aug 07, 2022 4:15 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From June 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Tue Aug 09, 2022 5:33 pm
by New_Windsor_NY
From June 1952, New York newspapers.
Caption(s), if any, are on the BOTTOM of the corresponding picture(s).
Click on a picture to ENLARGE (Not picture #3).
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Tue Aug 09, 2022 6:58 pm
by Boji
Anybody got any recent real bird pictures to share?
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Wed Aug 10, 2022 11:04 pm
by koldgold
This is an Australian Mud-lark, they build a cup nest on a single branch, using mud.
The Red Mountain Rosella, live in the High Wood-Lands.
The Eastern Rosella, live closer to the Coast, these two breed in a nest box, on the side of my house.
There is a Yellow Rosella, that live down South in South Australia and Tasmania.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Wed Aug 10, 2022 11:26 pm
by Boji
I may have posted these before, oh well!
Rose Breasted Grosbeak, only saw him twice.
Baltimore Oriole, he perched on the door and sassed me cuz the jelly was gone. I filled the dish and he came back and sang me a sweet song
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Thu Aug 11, 2022 12:00 am
by Dinadan
Nice photos, Koldgold. The Mud-lark is a lot prettier than the name would lead one to expect!
Good Grosbeak and Oriole shots, Boji.
Re: Ornithology (Bird) Thread
Posted: Thu Aug 11, 2022 12:09 am
by koldgold
I spent 7 days on the Murray River, this is some of the river birds.