Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Basic Photography Workshop

Saturday, April 16, 2011 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM
Venue: Assabet River National Wildlife Refuge, 680 Hudson Ave, Sudbury, MA
Fee: Adults $30.00 members/ $45.00 nonmembers
Instructor: Eric Smith Advance Registration is required.
Looking to get better at Bird Photography? Are you a Beginner or Advanced Beginner photographer looking to take that next step? Eric Smith will be conducting a 5-hour bird/wildlife photography workshop covering all aspects of digital photography: before you take the picture, when you take it and what to do afterward. Topics will include camera settings, what the different modes mean, lenses and their notation, focusing modes, what ISO does and how to use it to your advantage, an overview of Adobe Lightroom, how to store your pictures and much more. While a Digital SLR is not required, a very simple Point and Shoot might not have every feature discussed. But that just prepares you when you move up to a more advanced camera!
Instructions: Bring your camera, laptop (if you have one) and some way to take notes. Coffee and doughnuts will be served in the morning, followed by a catered lunch around mid-day.
Eric Smith has been shooting wildlife seriously for the last 7 years. He photographs all over New England, with an emphasis on birds. He loves being outdoors and that grew into wanting to share what he sees with others. Eric runs or participates in several photography clubs, teaches classes for Mass Audubon, and currently sits on the boards of both the Menotomy Bird Club and Eastern Mass Hawk Watch.
Advance registration is required; your place is secure only upon receipt of payment. Registration is limited! For more information and to register, please contact Eddie Giles (508) 378-3370.

Sunday, March 13, 2011

ANNUAL MEETING OF THE BROOKLINE BIRD CLUB - April 15, 2011

Join us for the Brookline Bird Club Annual Meeting on Friday, April 15, 2011 at 7:30 pm at the Harvard Museum of Natural History, Geological Lecture Hall,
24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA.

Julie Ellis Ph.D. will present “Ecology of Herring and Great Black-backed Gulls in Coastal New England”.  This presentation will cover the ecology and natural history of these two species of gulls in island ecology, including their reproductive biology, competitive and predatory interactions, dispersal, and their impacts on coastal environments.  Dr. Ellis is a Research Assistant Professor at Tufts University’s Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine and conducts her research through the Shoals Marine Laboratory at the Isles of Shoals, a 9-island archipelago located about 6 miles from Portsmouth, N.H.  More on our speaker below.

Members and guests are cordially invited. Admission is free. Parking is free at the 52 Oxford Street garage (opposite Everett St). Tell the guard you are attending the BBC meeting.

Please bring your used binoculars and other birding equipment for the Birder’s Exchange (more information).


OUR SPEAKER:

Dr. Julie Ellis, Research Assistant Professor at Tufts University’s Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, is Director of the Seabird Ecological Assessment Network (SEANET); A more detailed description of Dr. Ellis and her work can be found at the SEANET website and blog

Dr. Julie Ellis also has a gull blog where she posts sightings of gulls banded at Appledore Island, Maine.

Dr. Ellis is providing opportunities to band gulls via the Shoals Marine Laboratory on Appledore Island, Maine in May and July.   In May, adult gulls are banded,  band numbers and nest locations of previously banded birds are recorded, and gull nests are mapped using a GPS unit.  Sarah Courchesne, her colleague will be leading this group, and will also do some lectures and a wet lab on marine bird anatomy and biology.  There will be a similar course for one week in July during which pre-fledgling gulls will be banded.  No previous experience in bird banding is required in these courses -  in fact, the participants will not actually band the birds  they will help capture and restrain them, help to mark nests, and walk around the island recording band numbers and GPS coordinates for previously banded birds.  It should be a lot of fun and participants will learn quite a bit from just being on the island.  It’s not at all like songbird banding, for those who have done that  capturing and holding adult gulls is quite an experience!