Tag Archives: raleigh birdwatching trip

Great Horned Owl nest in raleigh, NC

While birding with a small group of friends a few weeks ago, we were lucky to spend time watching these Great Horned Owls in Raleigh, NC. Owls are sensitive to the presence of people in their nesting territory so I was using my 600mm lens so I was far enough away as not to disturb the birds.


I’d never seen an owlet before and was absolutely thrilled to see his little white fluffy head poking up from under his sleeping mother.
Nearby, we found the father Owl snoozing in a nearby pine tree.
Aren’t they lovely?



With a breeding season that starts in December, Great Horned Owls are one of the earliest species of birds to lay eggs here in North Carolina. Interestingly, they don’t build their own nests, rather they will take over the vacant nests of crows, hawks, Ospreys and other raptors as needed.
Incubation takes around 33 days and by 7 weeks of age, the Owlets are capable of taking their first short flights out of the nest.


Finding a Great Horned Owl can be challenging but the best way to spot one is to look for them in dry habitats like long leaf pine forests at dusk or very early in the morning.
When searching for these impressive raptors, it pays to look down at the ground too!
This is because Owls regurgitate the indigestible hair and bones of their prey: called owl pellets. You can often find a number of these pellets below their preferred perching trees.



Although they are a year round resident of NC, as a nocturnal bird, they tend to be more vocal at night during the wintertime months and can be best located by sound from November through February. Look for their distinctive, large football-shaped silhouettes on the top of bare tree top snags or telephone poles at the edges of fields.

Photos by @sally_siko of @birdwatching_nc on the fabulous full frame @canonusa
#5Ds

An eastern Towhee at the prairie Ridge Ecostation in Raleigh, N.C.

Check out this handsome male Eastern Towhee that I found at the Prairie Ridge Ecostation in Raleigh, N.C.
He responded well to my pishing attempts and was not the least bit shy as I took these photos .



A familiar sound found throughout the southeastern woodlands of the U.S., the Towhees’ song sounds a lot like “Drink your teeeee” – lasting about one second, starting with a sharp call (“drink!”) and ending with a short “teeeeea”. Its short two-part calls rise in pitch and are sometimes called a “chewink” call.


Photos by @sally_siko of @birdwatching_nc
Canon 5Ds

Happy Birding!

-Sally

Photos captured with my mighty Canon 5DS. If you are interested in getting shots like these with this 50 MP beast of a camera, please check out the link below to Canon USA.

Birdwatching NC is sponsored by Canon USA and I am proud to be a Canon shooter. After 13 years of trusting my professional photography business to Canon’s line of products, I cannot recommend this company strongly enough. If you have have any questions about my gear, shoot me a message!

Birdwatching NC is also sponsored by Zenfolio. Zenfolio is a photography website gallery and hosting company. I’ve been using Zenfolio to show and sell my images for over a decade and actually recommend this company to other photographers over WordPress!

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Bird Watching NEWS: Birding tours now offered in the Raleigh-Durham N.C. area

By: Sally Siko

Come birding with me! Birdwatching NC now offers birding tours in central North Carolina.
I’ve just posted the Birdwatching NC spring birding trips schedule to the website.
Your guide for these first few trips will be me (the admin of of this website) Sally Siko.

A Wood Duck at Bass Lake Park in Holly Springs, N.C.


For now, I’m sticking to local tours in the Triangle area of central NC so locations included will be Yates Mill Park, Bass Lake Park and Jordan Lake Park.
That being said, I’ll be adding additional tours on the coast with expanded itineraries soon. Here is the link to see the upcoming tours.



The first trip of the year will be at Jordan Lake on January 26th. We will set out in search of wintertime birds including, Bald Eagles, Cormorants, Kinglets, Gulls, Woodpeckers, Herons, Red-shouldered Hawks, cold weather Warblers and more.
Space is limited, check link below for tour details!

https://birdwatchingnc.com/birdwatching-n-c-trips-birding-in-north-carolina/birding-at-jordan-lake-park-trips/
A juvenile Bald Eagle soaring above Jordan Lake in apex, N.C.




Cheers to new adventures in the field in 2020!

Photos by @sally_siko of @birdwatching_nc
Canon 5Ds