Appreciating the wonder of birds and the challenge of capturing their images....
Monday, November 17, 2008
My Barred Owl Photo
I received some happy news today. This photo of a Barred Owl that I digiscoped back in April of 2007 won first place in a photo contest at Prince William Forest Park. The image will be featured on this national park's 2009 annual pass.
I'm disappointed to see that this blog has not been updated for several years...
Are you still active? I came across your blog while researching Monticello Park. I am an Alexandria resident as well and am looking for good habitat which to explore for birds...
Am I the last person on the planet to have a blog? I have to wonder how anyone finds time to read these things when everyone is busy writing their own. Anyway, I'm about to give it a go myself, offering my own personal perspective on all things related to bird watching and photography.
I live in Alexandria, VA and spend a lot of time at local parks, such as Monticello Park, Alexandria's little migration gem, as well as Dyke Marsh, Occoquan Bay NWR, and Huntley Meadows. I also take trips to nearby Maryland and Delaware locales. Birding is good year-round in this area so finding birds to photograph isn't too difficult. I digiscope distant perched birds with a Sony point-and-shoot camera attached to a Kowa spotting scope and use my Canon 40D with a 100-400 mm lens for closer, small, active birds, also for birds in flight. I have a bird photo web site at Paula Sullivan's Photo Galleries
With my digiscoping rig
Bird watching became a big part of my life in the early '90s when I became an empty nester and my dog died. Like many, I became increasingly fascinated with birds that came to my backyard feeder. I moved on to participating in local guided bird walks, then to keeping lists. Soon I was counting birds with survey teams, joining clubs, finally leading walks myself. In recent years, however, I have pulled back from the American Birding Association model of birding, finding listing tedious and meaningless, the competitive aspect of birding unsatisfying and shallow.
Photography has since become an important part of my birding experience. My ID skills and knowledge of bird habits and habitats enabled me to find my subjects. Observing my own photos on my computer screen enabled me to study birds in the kind of detail not possible before.
I derive enormous excitement and joy observing wild birds. I am thrilled by the romance and mystery of their migration, the amazing variety of their plumages and vocalizations. I am awed by their unceasing toil to find food every day of the year and good nesting sites in the spring. I am humbled by the challenges they face raising their young while fending off threats from predators, coping with habitat loss, pesticides, storms, and human intrusions. I am amazed by the ability of tiny kinglets, chickadees and wrens to survive harsh winters. I am thrilled when neotropical migrants pass through Northern Virginia every spring although I have been watching this spectacle for many years. The rhythm of life is a powerful beat, the melody exquisitely expressed by the song of birds. For me, the wonder never ceases.
Paula Sullivan
I go to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put in order.
John Burroughs
To seek thee did I often rove; Through woods and on the green; And thou wert still a hope, a love; Still longed for, never seen.
6 comments:
Nice photo. I remember it, and I can see why this photo will look good on the 2009 PWFP annual passes.
Congratulations! Beautiful image.
congrats! lovely photo.
Nice going. That's a beautiful image.
Beautiful photo, Paula. I have enjoyed reading your blog.
Excellent work, Paula!
I'm disappointed to see that this blog has not been updated for several years...
Are you still active? I came across your blog while researching Monticello Park. I am an Alexandria resident as well and am looking for good habitat which to explore for birds...
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