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MarkG

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Everything posted by MarkG

  1. Black & White Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  2. Yellow-throated Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Yellow-throated Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  3. Blackpoll Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  4. Prothonotary Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  5. Scarlet Tanager by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  6. Bay-breasted Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Bay-breasted Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  7. Eastern Kingbird by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  8. Great Crested Flycatcher by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Great Crested Flycatcher by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  9. Thanks! Not a bird I see very often in the neighborhood, good score.
  10. Seen in Chapel Hill, NC this morning. The bird had a fairly pronounced reddish hue to it, when I first saw it I instantly thought it was a Veery. I stalked it for a while trying to get a decent photo of it. I'm posting two photos, one fairly decent and the other not so much, but shows a bit more of the throat. I'll mention that about two minutes after I took the last photo of the bird I came across what I was 100% sure was a Swainson's Thrush and it had a much duller brown color to it.
  11. Black-throated Blue Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  12. Eastern Towhee by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Eastern Towhee by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  13. Scarlet Tanager by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  14. Chipping Sparrow by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  15. Baltimore Oriole by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Baltimore Oriole by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  16. Prothonotary Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Prothonotary Warbler by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  17. Seen this morning in Chapel Hill, NC. It kind of looks like a Field Sparrow to me, but I have doubts. I first saw the bird perched on a feeder along with a Chipping Sparrow, and this bird was noticeably larger. Usually those two species are about the same size. Also this birds beak just seems too large for a Field Sparrow. To me the bird was like a Field Sparrow on steroids. I wasn't able to get any great photos, but this is what I have.
  18. Ha! That might be true most of the time, but I don't get to see Barred Owls very often. I see hawks almost every day.
  19. Orchard Oriole by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr Orchard Oriole by Mark Goodwin, on Flickr
  20. Thanks to all. That angle was the only angle I got with my photos. The bird was quite a distance away and then a Barred Owl called fairly close to me and I was off to the races. I couldn't find the owl and the hawk was gone when I checked again. There are several Red-shoulder Hawk nest in the neighborhood and I see them often. The mature birds are easy to ID, but the juvenile/immature are harder for me, especially when they don't vocalize.
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