Friday, November 13, 2015

How it all started

I have always loved birds. I remember as a kid watching the chickadees flutter about in the trees during the long cold winters of Alaska. My dad would always keep record of the first Robin he saw each spring. I loved hearing the song of a robin on a summer day. To this day, it brings me a sense of peace and serenity.

I started birding seriously around late June of this year (2015), keeping a journal of all the birds I would see. What triggered my latent love of birding? My family's first camping trip of the summer was in our own backyard so to speak, at the Eagle River Campground. The campground was packed and summer was in full swing. It must have been 10 o'clock in the evening or so, and my wife and I and our son had gone for a short walk. I listened as the most beautiful bird song sang out from the trees around us. It was so ethereal and enchanting that I was determined to find out which one of my feathered friends was responsible for the lovely serenade. That was it. I bought myself a pair of binoculars and a couple of bird books and started getting out every chance I got. I found out that it was a Swainson's Thrush singing that night. It remains one of my favorite birds. I was hooked, and decided I was going to see how many species of birds I could record by years end. I would (and still do) take my lunch hour to go birding at a few spots around Anchorage, and during the summer and fall, I even get to go birding after work for a short time, before heading home.

About 3 months ago, I decided to purchase a camera. After some searching for a decent all-around camera, I settled on the Canon SX50 HS. This camera is marketed as a point-and-shoot camera, but it is much more than that. It has the ability to set shutter speeds, ISO, F-Stop and more. For me, it was perfect. I had taken some photography courses in art school, but that was so long ago, I would have to learn it all over again. The SX50 is great because while I'm messing around learning all the settings, I can still get out and take good photographs with the auto setting. I will eventually upgrade to a DSLR with some high powered lenses, but for now, the SX50 is working just fine for me.

Birding has definitely become a very involved hobby (and a bit spendy too). I've put out so many feeders around my house I'm sure to attract every bird within a 50 mile radius (one can dream). Already at our house we get; Steller's Jays, Black-capped and Boreal Chickadees, Golden-crowned Kinglets, Hairy and Downy Woodpeckers, Brown Creepers, Magpie, Red-breasted Nuthatches as regulars around the yard. I've even seen Yellow Warblers earlier in the fall, and just last weekend I saw (from a distance) some Pine Grosbeaks flying through the neighborhood. I'm hoping to attract them to my feeders so I can shoot them. With my camera of course. As of today, with my sighting of Bohemian Waxwings, I'm at 65 species. Not bad for an amateur first year birder. So 2015 has been a good year, but not an altogether BIG year. Cheers.


Learn more about my favorite bird, the Swainson's Thrush here.


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