Outdoor Ontario
Photography => Ontario Birds => Topic started by: Shortsighted on November 26, 2024, 09:44:03 AM
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On the rocks at west end ... Snow Bunting cursing the wind. I was not close and used a short lens, so I was kind of shortsighted. One day I hope to be nice and close.
(https://photos.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-FvmZgFn/0/LpW8tSZgRC2cRLWhVtZGfzqr8MBjLt8NgchSdW6q6/M/SB%2Cside%2Cfar-M.png) (https://steinphotography.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-FvmZgFn/A)
(https://photos.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-7XWPwXG/0/Kfs4Gnq86QDGfmKtchk5z28Jc8V45xMzj5T9QNd3R/M/SB%2Cdistant-M.png) (https://steinphotography.smugmug.com/Outdoor-Ontario/Outdoor-Ontario/i-7XWPwXG/A)
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Is this early for them? I'm used to seeing them a bit more fully into winter.
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No sir, I don't consider this to be early. In fact, Snow bunting have consistently been reported in other locations: Sam Smith, Ashbridges, Tommy Thompson, even Cranberry Marsh (once or twice) and a couple of reports from Darlington in Oshawa. When I was at Tommy Thompson a few weeks ago there were energetic flocks of small birds on Peninsula B, some were S. bunting, some were pipit and even included the odd larkspur. Others have managed some very good photos of them but I guess that I didn't smell right because they would take off when I was quite a distance away. I think that your best bet, as at Bluffer's, is to station yourself on the rocks and hunker-down for awhile and if you are lucky some might appear. Being motionless among the rocks is not interpreted as a threat but moving around, especially in their direction WILL NOT BE TOLERATED.
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Thanks for the tips!
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Very nice!
In the fields north of Barrie, you may find them in hundreds along the road.
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With all that fresh snow in the fields north of Barrie will you even be able to see them?