Winged Wednesday 8.20.2025: Birds Great and Small

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
It’s Winged Wednesday, where feathers, flutters, and flight steal the show! Whether they’re zipping, swooping, sunbathing, or just striking a sassy pose, we want to see your favorite winged wonders. Birds, bugs, bats, or butterflies—if it’s got wings, it’s fair game.

This week, I’m showcasing the smallest to the largest birds in North America—great and small, ground-skimming and sky-soaring. From the spark-sized Calliope to the shadow-casting Condor, these five feathered fliers span the full spectrum of size and spectacle. Turns out, no matter how many grams or pounds they bring to the perch, birds deliver drama—and dignity.

Calliope hummingbird-02464-Edit.jpg

The Diva in Miniature
The Calliope is the smallest bird in North America—just 3 inches long and weighing about 2.5 grams (roughly the size and weight of a tortilla chip, but faster and less edible).
Too small to perch on the feeder and too polite to pick a fight, this female darted in for red yucca nectar, then zipped off before the bigger hummers could notice. Built for subtlety, not showdowns.
I haven’t seen a male since 2014—just the occasional female or juvenile visit my yard, during migration. She’s tortilla-chip tiny—but smart enough to avoid bullies.

American Robin.jpg

American Robin: The Middle Manager of Nature
The American Robin is the bird equivalent of khakis—functional, familiar, and rarely exciting, but always around. About 10 inches long and weighing just under 3 ounces, it's your dependable backyard bird with surprising skills. Robins tilt their heads like they’re listening to a podcast, but they’re actually hunting worms—tuned in to faint sounds and watching for tiny shifts in soil and vegetation.

Red-tailed Hawk.jpg

Red-tailed Hawk: The Highway Patrol of the Sky
At about 19 inches long with a 4-foot wingspan, the Red-tailed Hawk is one of North America’s most common raptors. I shot this from my mobile blind (also known as my car). He banked so close I couldn’t even fit the wings in the frame.

Wild turkey-06782-Edit.jpg

Wild Turkey (Hen): The Feathered Fugitive
Wild Turkeys are built like poultry tanks, powered by legs and a brain that runs mostly on suspicion. At nearly 3 feet long and weighing about 8 pounds, this hen wasn’t about to stick around for a portrait. She saw me raise my camera and bolted across the road. Turkeys can run up to 20 miles an hour and fly in short bursts.

California condor-03379-Edit-2.jpg

California Condor That Almost Took My Hat
Wingspan: nearly 10 feet. Weight: twenty-something pounds. I was standing on Navajo Bridge when one glided past so close I felt the wind off its wings.
This wasn’t birdwatching. It was a reckoning. Condors don’t flap—they surf thermals like ancient ghosts, scanning the land as if deciding whether to spare it.
Biologists have reintroduced them/ They are tagged and tracked. This one was #10. I removed the number in the photo so he could look wild again.

Epilogue: From Spark to Shadow
From the Calliope’s blur to the Condor’s glide, size doesn’t define wonder—only the scale of it. The smallest birds flit like secrets. The largest drift like omens.
But whether they weigh two grams or twenty pounds, they all remind us to look up—and sometimes, duck.
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
Fun set and an amazing range of sizes in these birds. Neat to catch the condor this close in flight. Your turkey gal is much nicer looking that the ones I have seen out along the Oregon coast - much more vivid colors.
 

Trent Watts

Well-Known Member
That was a great read and wonderful visuals to go along with the text Eric. Such fun to experience your posts.
These are my submissions from the last week of exploring Vancouver Island.

A slightly wet Spotted Towhee at the Airbnb where I was staying.
_8153701.jpg


One of the Yellowlegs (Lesser I think) at a river estuary.
_8174202.jpg


It is very dry around here so I was surprised to see this patch of Sweatpeas flower away as if they were being secretly watered. The Yellow-faced Bumblebees and some Honey bees were going crazy with their feeding.
_8194657.jpg


This Song Sparrow had only one tail feather and it was beat up. It could have been a natural moult or perhaps an 'incident' with a predator.
_8194944.jpg


A tiny fly sitting on a leaf at a marsh I was exploring. BugGuide says it is a Muscoid fly of some type.
W1012412.jpg
 

AlanLichty

Moderator
I decided to go along with Eric's Big and Small although my Big is rather puny compared to his examples.

Small is an Anna's hummingbird giving me the stink eye since I am standing between him and HIS feeder while taking the shot:

CR5m2_AnnasStinkEye020325.jpg


My big shot is a Scrub Jay parent acting as a sentry atop an arborvitae while a nearby juvenile is learning to forage.

CR5m2_JayWatch082524.jpg
 

DES

Well-Known Member
It’s Winged Wednesday, where feathers, flutters, and flight steal the show! Whether they’re zipping, swooping, sunbathing, or just striking a sassy pose, we want to see your favorite winged wonders. Birds, bugs, bats, or butterflies—if it’s got wings, it’s fair game.

This week, I’m showcasing the smallest to the largest birds in North America—great and small, ground-skimming and sky-soaring. From the spark-sized Calliope to the shadow-casting Condor, these five feathered fliers span the full spectrum of size and spectacle. Turns out, no matter how many grams or pounds they bring to the perch, birds deliver drama—and dignity.

View attachment 83628
The Diva in Miniature
The Calliope is the smallest bird in North America—just 3 inches long and weighing about 2.5 grams (roughly the size and weight of a tortilla chip, but faster and less edible).
Too small to perch on the feeder and too polite to pick a fight, this female darted in for red yucca nectar, then zipped off before the bigger hummers could notice. Built for subtlety, not showdowns.
I haven’t seen a male since 2014—just the occasional female or juvenile visit my yard, during migration. She’s tortilla-chip tiny—but smart enough to avoid bullies.
Eric....your Diva is a gem! A perfect capture.
We very occasionally get to see a Calliope -- usually in the early spring -- and we see (and hear) the male. This is a photo at our feeder. When we hear him arriving, it's not too difficult to grab a camera and get a photo.

Calliope male.jpg
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
That was a great read and wonderful visuals to go along with the text Eric. Such fun to experience your posts.
These are my submissions from the last week of exploring Vancouver Island.

A slightly wet Spotted Towhee at the Airbnb where I was staying.
View attachment 83636

One of the Yellowlegs (Lesser I think) at a river estuary.
View attachment 83637

It is very dry around here so I was surprised to see this patch of Sweatpeas flower away as if they were being secretly watered. The Yellow-faced Bumblebees and some Honey bees were going crazy with their feeding.
View attachment 83638

This Song Sparrow had only one tail feather and it was beat up. It could have been a natural moult or perhaps an 'incident' with a predator.
View attachment 83639

A tiny fly sitting on a leaf at a marsh I was exploring. BugGuide says it is a Muscoid fly of some type.
View attachment 83640
Five superb shots, Trent—each one a gem. Your Muscoid fly macro is master-level artistry, and that towhee photo is Incredible!!! Highest compliments!
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
I decided to go along with Eric's Big and Small although my Big is rather puny compared to his examples.

Small is an Anna's hummingbird giving me the stink eye since I am standing between him and HIS feeder while taking the shot:

View attachment 83641

My big shot is a Scrub Jay parent acting as a sentry atop an arborvitae while a nearby juvenile is learning to forage.

View attachment 83642
Alan, both the Anna’s Hummingbird and the Scrub Jay are captured beautifully—the light is soft, the details are crisp, and the personality of each bird shines through. Keep clicking, I’m loving every one of your birds!
Guillemots getting flying instructions.
View attachment 83648
Ken, this is fantastic—thirteen Guillemots lined up like a classroom, all eyes on the one flapping instructor. It really does look like “Flight School 101: How to Wing It.” Perfectly timed and wonderfully titled!
 

Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Eric....your Diva is a gem! A perfect capture.
We very occasionally get to see a Calliope -- usually in the early spring -- and we see (and hear) the male. This is a photo at our feeder. When we hear him arriving, it's not too difficult to grab a camera and get a photo.

View attachment 83644
DES, what a thrill—your feeder has hosted a jewel! A male Calliope stopping by for a photo session is incredible. Honestly, it’s a treasure. My last sighting of a male was back in 2014, so I admit I’m a bit envious. Keep an eye on him after feeding; many times they’ll perch nearby, and you might just get that clear portrait shot too.
 

DES

Well-Known Member
Thank you. I prefer photos that aren't at our feeder, but I have very few of those -- my better shots seem to be at the feeder. Three more samples. They are crops, so they won't permit much enlargement.

Another Calliope

Calliope3.jpg


A Black Chinned

Chin.jpg


And I'm not sure what this beauty is

Hummer.jpg


Darrell
 
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Eric Gofreed

Well-Known Member
Thank you. I prefer photos that aren't at our feeder, but I have very few of those -- my better shots seem to be at the feeder. Three more samples. They are crops, so they won't permit much enlargement.

Another Calliope

View attachment 83681

A Black Chinned

View attachment 83682

And I'm not sure what this beauty is

View attachment 83683

Darrell
DES, your feeder shots are wonderful—it’s clear you’ve put thought and patience into them. Honestly, feeders are where most of us get our best chances, so there’s no shame in that at all!


For photography, you might try using smaller feeders that only hold about an ounce of sugar water—hummingbirds return more often, and it’s easier to control the background. Another fun trick is to place a tubular flower (like a penstemon) spiked with a drop of sugar water in the flower—then you can catch them in a more natural pose. Here’s a link to my own setup for reference (don’t worry about the flash part, look at the feeder and flower arrangement):


https://flic.kr/p/2bMuiGL

You’re doing beautifully already—these little tweaks might just give you even more variety.
 

DES

Well-Known Member
DES, your feeder shots are wonderful—it’s clear you’ve put thought and patience into them. Honestly, feeders are where most of us get our best chances, so there’s no shame in that at all!


For photography, you might try using smaller feeders that only hold about an ounce of sugar water—hummingbirds return more often, and it’s easier to control the background. Another fun trick is to place a tubular flower (like a penstemon) spiked with a drop of sugar water in the flower—then you can catch them in a more natural pose. Here’s a link to my own setup for reference (don’t worry about the flash part, look at the feeder and flower arrangement):


https://flic.kr/p/2bMuiGL

You’re doing beautifully already—these little tweaks might just give you even more variety.
Your preparation and knowledge certainly produce beautiful results. We're always amazed at the courage of the tiny birds to adapt to the changes we make from time to time -- and even to approach us.

H2.jpg
 
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