Finding things to bird (and a caution on Merlin)

For folks who haven't played with it, the eBird target species list can be quite useful for finding species to chase and places to bird. I took a good chunk of the summer more or less off birding (because: quiet and boring), and with fall looming with shorebird migration started, I decided to play "what species can I find that should have been on my year list months ago?" -- and top of the list was Osprey.  So I headed out to where I've seen osprey before, because there were also a few other species that might be findable there. 

And wouldn't you know it, I sat down, started watching, and within 5 minutes, the local osprey flew past about 25 feet up, about 50 feet away from me. And then to make sure I noticed, he circled past and flew by again, and for good measure, did a loop around me, and then flew off. This sort of thing falls into my "God exists and has a sense of humor" karma bucket.

Also was able to nail one other species while watching -- Heerman's Gull. And sicne I take lots of pictures of really far away birds in case looking in Lightroom can help me ID them, two OTHER species were added to my year list: Marbled Murrelet and Pigeon Guillemot. Three of those four are common to that location, so no huge surprises, and the latter not too uncommon. 

Not a bad hour sitting in the sun shooting images of things (except for the big hunk of sensor dust... whoops)

Also, as a reminder not to trust Merlin TOO much: a week ago I was out and about shooting at another location when a flock of small birds flew up out of the tide pools. "Peeps" my brain thought, and I took a bunch of photos hoping to get a decent ID of them once I got home. When I got home, I found: European Starlings. Which shouldn't have surprised me there. Oh well. 

And then, for giggles, I grabbed a screen shot of the starlings blown up in Lightroom and fed it to Merlin to see what it thought. It was absolutely, 100% convinced it as a Parasitic Jaegar. 

A great reminder not to give Merlin too much authority in your ID decision making. It can be a super useful tool, but it passes itself off as a lot more certain than it should in many situations. (for those that don’t remember, a few months back I went into a deep dive into the technology behind the Merlin app and other identification tools, and ended up realizing that Merlin presents itself as a lot more authoritative than it should. If you want to see the details on this, check out my notes around Merlin amd the Haikubox ID system)

Chuq Von Rospach

Birder, Nature and Wildlife Photography in Silicon Valley

http://www.chuq.me
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Photo Wednesday: Fitzgerald Marine Reserve