Can you identify this bird?
For answer, click on "Continue reading…" immediately below.
For more Tuesday Teasers, click here.
Can you identify this bird?
For answer, click on "Continue reading…" immediately below.
For more Tuesday Teasers, click here.
With all the fuss over the Snowy Owl(s), another recent arrival has gotten short shrift.
A Eurasian Green-winged Teal (Common Teal) is in the tidal impoundment across the parking lot from the new science building and observatory in DeKorte Park in Lyndhurst.
He has been a regular winter visitor for roughly a decade, and you typically can get great views of him when the tide is low…
More on the Eurasian Green-winged Teal here.
To calculate the tides at the DeKorte tidal impoundments, click here, look up Hackensack River, Amtrak RR, swing bridge, punch in the appropriate information — then add roughly 90 minutes… Alas, low tides for the next couple of days appear to be just before dawn and after sunset…
Several weeks ago, after a Snowy Owl was seen (and photographed) at Liberty State Park, New Jersey birders got into a lively debate about the wisdom (or lack thereof) of using flash photography when taking pictures of owls.
Now that Snowy Owls have been seen regularly in the Meadowlands, the debate takes on a little more immediacy.
We asked David Johnson, head of the Global Owl Project, for his thoughts.
Here's the word:
"From a biological perspective, I would not think that the camera flash would be much of an issue," says David. "There is lightning where many of the owls live, and such a flash is very short-lived. The focus should not be on the flash, per se, but rather on the general disturbance of people being close to the owl. " …
Click "Continue reading …" for more of David Johnson's comments on photographing owls.
Thought we would post some more shots of the two Snowy Owls in the Meadowlands.
Above, a Snowy flies near dusk on Friday. Below, you can see both owls in the same frame.
The white object in the upper-lefthand corner is the second owl.
Both photos been enlarged greatly; they were taken with a 400-millimeter lens.
The word is that heavy snows have severely reduced the number of lemmings on their home turf in the Arctic, and the Snowy Owls and moved south in search of prey on which to feed.
That's one of the many reasons that it is important to stay away from these highly stressed and sometimes starving owls.
Snowy Owls have also been seen elsewhere in New Jersey and in neighboring states in recent days.
More on Snowy Owls here.
MONDAY: ON PHOTOGRAPHING OWLS
This morning there were two Snowy Owls in the Meadowlands.
The photo above, taken this morning, is courtesy of Jerry Barrack. If you do see one of these amazing raptors, please keep your distance and do not trespass. These shots were taken through a telephoto lens.
SATURDAY & MONDAY: MORE SNOWY OWL PIX AND INFO
Click "Continue reading …" for more Snowy photos.
The Meadowlands Commission has been installing tide gates along Berry's Creek in Rutherford and East Rutherford to reducing flooding in the surrounding area, including Route 17.
The tide gates are paying another dividend — they are catching hundreds of cans and plastic bottles before they flow into the creek, and then into the Hackensack River.
Where does all this litter come from? Thoughtless people throwing bottles and cans out their car windows or tossing them in storm drains.
The next step in the tide-gate anti-litter effort: Setting up a program to recycle these materials.
The landfills around DeKorte Park are brimming with raptors these days.
Today we saw Rough-legged Hawks, male and female Northern Harriers, American Kestrels and Red-tailed Hawks in Lyndhurst and North Arlington.
Yesterday. birder Michael Britt reported seeing 6 Rough-legged Hawks (4 light, 2 dark) 3 Bald Eagles (2 adults, 1 Imm.) 3 Short-eared Owls, 3 Kestrels, several Northern Harriers including 2 gray ghosts), many Red-tails and 2 Great Cormorants
Click "Continue reading for Mike Britt's field notes …
This weekly feature is brought to you by the Meadowlands Commission's Parks Department to give you some historical background on how local places, landmarks, and geographical features got their name.
Mehrhof Pond and Mehrhof Road, Little Ferry
During the late 19th century, Little Ferry was the second-largest brick making center in the U.S., producing 100 million bricks annually.
One of the Mehrhof Brothers clay pits remain – Mehrhof Pond, a freshwater pond at the end of Mehrhof Road.
The pond is a great birding site, and the winter home of hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of Ruddy Ducks.
(Reference: The Hackensack Meadowlands — Kevin W. Wright)
For answer, click on "Continue reading…" immediately below.
For more Tuesday Teasers, click here.