Bird Photography Weekly #38
May 18, 2009
Article in: Bird Photography Weekly

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Banding Birds at Birdfest 2009
May 12, 2009
Article in: Bird Conservation
Each year during the month of May, Sand Bluff Bird Observatory (SBBO) hosts their Bird Fest. This festival centers around teaching the public about the wonders of birds, specifically focusing on the process of bird banding (or ringing). Each year we try to stop in for a little bit but this is also the weekend that the Illinois Spring Bird Count is, and we are usually out counting birds. This year was different because Jennie (Veery) graduated from Northern Illinois University so we were busy with that.
Henslow’s Sparrow – so close you could smell his grasshopper breath

This year we were able to take our visiting aunt to Bird Fest for a couple of hours and, as always, it was loads of fun.
Bird banding is one of the most underfunded yet highly rewarded research efforts. The process works like this:
- put up mist nets in high bird traffic locations
- walk the nets and remove captured birds
- place captured birds in nets
- band birds with numbered bands
- record all information
- release bird
When an excellent bird is found, the Bird-arazzi heads outside to capture up-close photos. This Henslow’s Sparrow was a major highlight as it was the 2nd one banded in three days and only the fourth in 43 years at this location.

However, this Baltimore Oriole quickly stole the show. Perhaps it was his flashy orange? (We still love our brown sparrows though.)
Besides seeing birds super close, bird banding at SBBO is the ultimate learning experience. You may be an expert birder, but if you’ve never listened to the grand master, Lee Johnson, you are missing out. His encyclopedic knowledge of birds borders on supernatural.
Lee Johnson holding a Gray Catbird and firing off hundreds of nuggets of information

Birds are banded every Saturday and Sunday at Colored Sands Forest Preserve during spring and fall migration. They are funded entirely on donations and events like Bird Fest, so it was fun to support their effort (and see a lot of great birding friends in the process).
While we were milling about outside (awaiting yet another photo-op), one of the master banders, Richard Hamilton, briskly walked down the path cradling a large bird in his coat. What he brought out was a Cooper’s Hawk.
Our friend Mike Eickman held the hawk for photos

Whenever a hawk is caught in the nets it is a race against time to get them out before they break free on their own. SBBO also bands raptors at a special location, but this bird was caught in the “regular” nets.
Bird banding is an excellent way to get close views of an amazing array of birds and the perfect place to bring fledgling birders.
Bird Photography Weekly #37
May 11, 2009
Article in: Bird Photography Weekly

Bird Photography Weekly #36 is complete so join in on the action of the 37th installment.
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Phriday Photo – Northern Waterthrush
May 8, 2009
Article in: Photography
Save Our Boreal Birds Petition – Your Signature Needed!
May 7, 2009
Article in: Bird Conservation
The Boreal Songbird Initiative is seeking petition signatures to ask the Canadian government to keep large amounts of the Boreal forest intact. All you have to do is sign your name to help this great cause reach the goal of 70,000 signatures before the May 12th launch.
The birds will thank you and Birdfreak.com thanks you!!

Photo courtesy of Jeff Nadler
Database Error – Now Fixed
May 5, 2009
Article in: Updates
The site was down for most of Monday but thankfully, we got it up and running again. Somehow the database table for all our posts got corrupted, rendering all our posts as “missing”. With WordPress we use MySQL for the database so we got this error:
Error 144: Table 'xxxxxx' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed
This was most definitely a ?!?! moment for us not being at all knowledgable in the inner caverns of web server databases. But the beauty of the internet is that it is often quite easy to find an answer to a technical question/error so we were able to find this fix and it worked.
Run a MySQL query: REPAIR TABLE tablename. It worked like magic and things are back to normal!!
In case some stuff is out of whack, please email us – birdfreak at birdfreak dot com. Thank you for stopping by and we have many reviews and migration reports to post soon!!
The photo of the Ring-billed Gull is how we felt when this error was discovered!
Bird Photography Weekly #36
May 4, 2009
Article in: Bird Photography Weekly

Bird Photography Weekly #35 is complete so join in on the action of the 36th installment.
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Phriday Photo – Ruby-crowned Kinglet
May 1, 2009
Article in: Photography
Ruby-crowned Kinglets (Regulus calendula) have been foraging wildly, leading the charge of migration which has picked up exponentially in just a few days.





















