View allAll Photos Tagged turdusmigratorius
This is a male, as seen by his brilliant coloration, black head, eye ring, and white streaks under his beak.
The plant growing in front of the bird is an unidentified wild onion. Also in the photo: seed pods from Paulownia tomentosa and mushrooms from recent wet weather.
Lens: Questar Duplex telescope, 1400mm ƒ16. Distance to the robin was about 40 meters / 130 ft. The Questar was mounted on a Manfrotto 405 geared head on a Manfrotto carbon-fiber tripod.
Available light consisted of diffuse sunlight.
2020 Photograph, American Robin Preening while Sitting on Nest (Turdus migratorius, Thrush Family Turdidae), Fairfax, Virginia, © 2020.
El mirlo primavera (Turdus migratorius) también conocido como zorzal robín,mirlo americano, robín, robín americano, zorzal migratorio, zorzal pechirrojo, zorzal petirrojo o zorzal real, es una especie de ave paseriforme de la familia de los túrdidos.
Nombre: Turdus Migratorius
Orden: Passeriformes
Familia: Turdidae
Genero: Turdus
Especie: T. Migratorius
The American Robin (Turdus migratorius), also known as the Robin or Common Robin, is a migratory songbird of the thrush family.
Dad found a worm for Junior. But it was much further from my window so I could barely get a shot. When the baby spotted Dad, it fluttered over to him & they both moved out of sight. I had to put my camera down as the dentist came in the room at that point.
American Robin (Turdus migratorius)
Dentist Office, Garland Texas
My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com
I find it kind of interesting to capture birds at high shutter speeds as they bathe. For sure you can capture scenes that the naked eye never sees. This was shot at 1/1600sec. Check it out in lightbox, press "L"
Bird song causes a pause along the forest path in Englishman River Park to glance to filtered light finding its way through moss and tall trees where the camera finds an American Robin. Lovely, still and serene.
Uploading problems again! I just can't get my main photo (American Kestrel) to upload! Tried old and 'new' uploader and drag and drop - nothing works. Now showing.
Good luck, SmugMug! You've got your work cut out for you, now that you have taken over the Flickr website, but keeping it as a separate site. Sounds very hopeful, though : ) I have a good many of my photos (same ones as on Flickr) already on the SmugMug site. Adding a link to my main page, in case anyone is not familiar with SmugMug.
Yesterday afternoon, 20 April 2018, I had no choice but to go out somewhere to test a Nikon Coolpix B700. I had returned the original one to the store as soon as I got a chance to use it, as it had a major problem. When taking maybe half the photos, the camera would give a loud "clunk" that could be heard and felt. Fortunately, I had just come across someone's review online and it mentioned what his camera was doing - when the shutter button was pressed, the image was suddenly shifted upward, downward or to one side. This was exactly what was happening with my camera each time the clunk was heard and felt. As a result I was getting headless birds or birds without the tail or feet (like the Robin in this photo)! So, I took the camera back to the store and was given a replacement to try out. I am finding the same problem with shifting, but there is no "clunk" to be heard or felt. Now I need to try and find out the connection between this image shifting and perhaps Image Stabilization/Vibration Reduction. The extra zoom on this camera, along with it having 60x optical (instead of the 24X optical on my Panasonic FZ200) is what I need.
Anyway, I took my usual short drive SW of the city to find some things that I could photograph. Not a whole lot to be found, but a group of three competing American Robins made my first stop. Later, three distant Mountain Bluebirds were in fighting mode and two of them were down on the ground in quite a vicious attack. Too far away for more than snapshots. I also stopped to watch three distant Hawks that were competing. You know what they say : "Two's company, three's a crowd".
A very cooperative American Kestrel gave me a good chance to try out the camera at different zoom distances. Cars were a different thing - and I was not on the best road for stopping, so I ended up driving the same stretch of road several times. These birds are so beautiful. I knew that this one caught something to eat, but it was timed just when another car came down the road and I needed to move on.
Of course, an old barn is always a bonus. The one I posted today shows how fields are still covered in snow. This should disappear before too long, as we have much warmer temperatures coming up. Unfortunately, after so much snow this winter, there is now flooding in fields and over roads south of us. Before heading out that way, it is a good idea to check which roads are closed.
The sun was shining for most of my drive, with cloud moving in towards the time I wanted to leave. A stop to pick up some delicious chili was the final stop of the afternoon.
December 1, 2020
A pair of thirsty robins took control of the water bowl today.
(Turdus migratorius)
Brewster, Massachusetts
Cape Cod - USA
Photo by brucetopher
© Bruce Christopher 2020
All Rights Reserved
...always learning - critiques welcome.
Tools: Canon 7D & iPhone 11.
No use without permission.
Please email for usage info.
American robin (Turdus migratorius) on an almost bare tree branch. The blue sky and some fall leaves make the cool warm contrast even higher. This year's warm weather then three upper 20s F (-2-3 C) nights made almost all our leaves drop at once. More color around town but not in the yard.
American Robin puffing up in the early morning cold. He is trying to grab as many Mountain Ash berries as possible before the waxwings get them. Mt Shasta, Siskiyou Co, California.
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY, everyone!
Posting this for the record, not for photographic merit : ) On 19th August 2015, a group of friends and I saw this unusually pale American Robin at Inglewood Bird Sanctuary. It was a very slow day for birds and I only took a handful of photos of anything during our three-hour walk.
©All photographs on this site are copyright: DESPITE STRAIGHT LINES (Paul Williams) 2011 – 2021 & GETTY IMAGES ®
No license is given nor granted in respect of the use of any copyrighted material on this site other than with the express written agreement of DESPITE STRAIGHT LINES (Paul Williams) ©
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I would like to say a huge and heartfelt 'THANK YOU' to GETTY IMAGES, and the 37.981+ Million visitors to my FLICKR site.
***** Selected for sale in the GETTY IMAGES COLLECTION on July 31st 2020
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This photograph of An American Robin (Turdus migratorius), was taken at an altitude of Seven hundred and two metres, at 11:01am on Thursday 24th May 2016 off Robert Campbell Highway 4 and Alaska Highway 1 in the town of Watson Lake, Yukon.
Turdus migratorius is a migratory songbird, and loosely related to the European Robin which both share the red breast. This is an Eastern variant with darker markings and black acrosss the neck and back. It is also in it's breeding plumage.
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Nikon D800 Focal length 500mm Shutter speed 1/16o0s Aperture f/5.6 iso100 RAW (14Bit) Hand held. Nikon back focus button enabled. AF-C Continuous point focus with 3-D tracking. Manual exposure. Matrix metering. Auto white balance.Nikon AF Fine tune on (+10).
Nikkor AF-S 200-500mm f/5.6G ED VR. Power Up 95mm UV filter. Nikon MB-D12 battery grip. Two Nikon EN-EL15 batteries. Nikon DK-17M 1.2x Magnifying Eyepiece. Nikon DK-19 soft rubber eyecup. Digi-Chip 64GB Class 10 UHS-1 SDXC card. Lowepro Transporter camera strap. Lowepro Vertex 200 AW Photo/ 15.4" Notebook Backpack camera bag. Nikon GP-1 GPS unit.
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LATITUDE: N 60d 3m 49.11s
LONGITUDE: W 128d 42m 46.63s
ALTITUDE: 702.0m
RAW (TIFF) FILE SIZE: 103.00MB
PROCESSED (JPeg) SIZE: 11.27MB
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PROCESSING POWER:
Nikon D800 Firmware versions A 1.10 B 1.10 L 2.009 (Lens distortion control version 2)
HP 110-352na Desktop PC with AMD Quad-Core A6-5200 APU processor. AMD Radeon HD8400 graphics. 8 GB DDR3 Memory with 1TB SATA storage. 64-bit Windows 10. Verbatim USB 2.0 1TB desktop hard drive. WD My Passport Ultra 1tb USB3 Portable hard drive. Nikon ViewNX2 Version 2.10.3 64bit. Adobe photoshop Elements 8 Version 8.0 64bit.
ARCHIVES ARGENTIQUES
Diapositive numérisée
19 mai 1996
Parc National des Montagnes Rocheuses
Rocky Mountain National Park
Estes Park, Colorado, USA
Kodak Elite chrome 100 ; Pentax MX ; smc Takumar 1:4 300mm
A flock of Robins have been enjoying these berries near my office
Happy Election Day USA!
Hope you're all going out to vote-I don't know how you can stand the incredibly long campaigning!
Every year American robins occupy the same nest in a tree in the yard next door, and every year the fledglings end up in our yard, roosting on the ground, or on low bushes and trees, or, as in this case, on our back patio, while a parent shuttles worms to its mouth. This year so far there's been only one little one. Yesterday, the parent (mother or father, both tend to the chicks) fed this little guy all morning, then I didn't see the adult again for hours. Finally the youngster decided to fly away. It easily cleared the top of the fence between our yard and the neighbors', only to slam full speed into the side of their house and disappear below the fence. I was quite happy to see it in the yard again this morning none the worse for the wear, parent in attendance. But any minute now it will be digging its own worms and feeding itself.
Photographed at Red Butte Gardens; Salt Lake City, Utah.
Another shot from last spring with the red sandstone formation in the background which gives "Red Butte" Gardens its name.