I'm also confused. I looked at the Cornell page, and the photo of a female Bullock's looks, to me, exactly similar (is that a thing?) to Ken's photograph. I'd like to hear more discussion, as Louis generally knows precisely what he's talking about.
On Sun, Feb 2, 2014 at 7:26 PM, Ken DiBiccari <kendibiccari@roadrunner.com> wrote:
Hi Louis,I have not returned to try and get more images of the Oriole but my belief of it being a Bullock's Oriole comes from my researching six differentfield guides on the bird and after seeing and reading the description and looking at the photograph of the adult female Bullock on page # 427 of theNational Wildlife Federation - Field Guide To - BIRDS - Of North America by.....Edward S. Brinkley, that the photograph on the bottom of that pageis so convincing in every detail that I truly believe it is indeed a Female Bullock's Oriole. If at all possible you can get access to this particular referenceguild, I think you can see why I have come to this conclusion. I will try again soon to get more images of the bird if it is still there. I do have a short videoof this bird in the tree where I took the still images but I don't know how to post it on line.Your response is welcome........ Ken DiBiccari
On Wednesday, January 29, 2014 3:19:13 PM UTC-5, Ken DiBiccari wrote:Hello Everyone,
I have returned every day to try and get a better image of this bird to verify that is in fact a Bullock's Oriole and it definitely appears to be.
I spent two hours today out in freezing cold and wind hoping to get a good shot of the bird and it finally appeared for less than a minute and
I was able to get these two images of it before it flew off into the woods. You can see them on my flickr page.
Ken DiBiccari
ihttp://www.flickr.com/photos/ken_dibiccari-nature_images/12151981134/--
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