This is a bird I've wanted to photograph for many years. Bohemian waxwing get there name due to their nomadic lifestyle. They are beautiful little birds, slightly smaller than the North American robin, and travel in moderate sized flocks. They feed primarily on berries. From what I can gather there is no noticeable difference in markings between male and female.
Here in south central Alaska mountain ash trees grow naturally in the forest. They provide beautiful leaf color and large clumps of red berries in fall so many people plant them in yards where they do very well, often reaching heights of 40-50ft(15m). The berries are the favorite food of the bohemian waxwing. For years I've worked in office buildings with ash trees in the landscaping and have seen bohemians feeding many times but have never had an opportunity to shoot them. This past August when we moved into our current home I was interested to see that our next door neighbor has several large ash trees
I've been keeping an eye on the trees and yesterday the bohemians finally showed up. Unfortunately it was late on a cloudy, drizzly day and the light was terrible. Plus I was in the middle of laying tile in the kitchen But I may not get another chance due to frequent travel in coming weeks. So I snuck away from the boss long enough to take a few shots
As I said, lighting was horrid. Poor light and that strongly backlit. Had to crank it up to ISO2500 on the D500 which is less than optimal to say the least. Please excuse the noise as I didn't take the time for anything more than basic NR on these shots. They really need to be run through Neat Image. As always best viewed in the light box.
Nikon D500, Nikon 200-500mm f5.6 VR, handheld
1/1000, f5.6, ISO2500
1) I believe this is an immature bird due to the lack of red tips on the back of wings. They were difficult to frame even when perched on the bunches of berries. Combined weight of berries and bird on the branch tips and the bird's movement caused them to bounce several inches vertically. The birds were often inverted trying to get at the berries.
2) I was not able to capture one with crest fully displayed. This was the most visible crest I managed. Note the little red tips on back of wings and reddish brown under the tail. Once they pick a berry they toss it into the air, catch it in wide open beak, and swallow it whole. I managed a shot or two of the toss but with messy BG. The dull look to the berries beneath the bird in this shot is due to them being partially obscured by an OOF branch. My shooting position was very awkward with a lot of branches between camera and the ash tree. Though I was off the ground so vertical angle wasn't bad.