Bill Dix
Well-known member
- Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows
This image was shot several days ago at a NJ location where one (or two?) Baird's Sandpipers had been reliably reported the day before. Baird's are rarities in New Jersey, although it seems that one or two trickle through here each year about this time on their way to Tierra del Fuego.
To me, this bird - a worn juvenile, I believe - exhibits some similarities to Baird's, but leaves me wondering. It has dark scaly pattern with light fringes on the back. It has a dark area between eye and base of bill. It has a buffy face and buffy streaked breast, BUT not as buffy as some Bairds images I've seen. It's bill has a slight decurvature near the end; BUT the bill appears wider than a Baird's. It has dark wingtips that extend slightly beyond the tail; but not dramatically as in some Baird's images. Wings certainly don't seem long enough to take him almost from pole to pole. And perhaps most troubling, Geoffrey and I watched a dozen sandpipers in this spot on Friday evening, and although I attempted to focus on the one that seemed to me to exhibit the most Bairdish tendencies, all of the dozen appeared to be approximately the same size and shape, whereas the Baird's should appear a bit more elongated than a Semipalmated Sandpiper. Aside from the Semipalm, other competitors could be Western and White-rumped; and while I'll admit I'm not that familiar with the juvie plumages of those, I think they fail the test.
So my conclusion: a rare SemiBaird Sandpiper:e3. Hopefully some of you will have a better suggestion.
D500, 500PF with 1.4 TC, ISO 800, 1/2500s @ f/8 manual.
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