41-year-old musician and school band director Michael Sanchez bought his first camera just a month ago. Last week, while trying to get nice sunrise landscape shots at Hug Point along the Oregon coast, Sanchez took photos of a small, dark-looking bird in the dim dawn light. While not initially realizing it, Sanchez had captured some of the only photos ever of a blue rock thrush (Monticola solitarius) in North American history.
“I’m just a beginner photographer, and I wouldn’t consider myself a birder at all,” Sanchez tells PetaPixel over the phone. “I always watch [birds] when they are out, and I even had some pet birds years ago, but never thought I’d be diving headfirst into something like this.”
The “this” Sanchez refers to is a media firestorm. After returning home to Vancouver, Washington, from his roughly two-hour trip to Hug Point — his second in as many days — Sanchez looked through his photos and realized that the little “black” bird he photographed as the Sun was eking above the horizon wasn’t black, but blue and chestnut.
“I thought, ‘Oh wait, this is not an average black little bird at all,’” Sanchez recalls looking at his RAW files in Lightroom for the first time. “The colors were very apparent to me. I thought, ‘Oh, well, this is something different, for sure.’”
Sanchez shared some images online, still not quite realizing what he had seen. One of his friends passed it along to a bird enthusiast they know, and everything snowballed. Sanchez’s photo has been shared by online birding communities, local news, and he says he’s even chatted with USA Today.
The budding photographer describes the past week as an “uproar” he didn’t realize he was going to start, with his images sending the birding community in the Pacific Northwest into an absolute frenzy. People are trying to see the bird for themselves.
“We live in a beautiful world. We have beautiful birds, beautiful landscapes, and so I think if this encourages people just to take a little bit of notice of what’s going on around them, and whether it’s a little bird or something else, I think that’s a great thing,” Sanchez explains.
Sanchez’s sighting is just the second unofficial sighting ever on record in North America, with the last in 1997 not being admitted into the official record due to insufficient data.
The blue rock thrush, a species of chat, is native to Europe and Asia. In its official range, Oregon and the rest of North America are way off the map. The starling-sized male is thousands of miles from home.
Sanchez thinks his story resonates with so many people because it’s fun and positive, and it is about “some guy” who “just happened” to take one of the most remarkable bird photos in Oregon’s rich birding history.
The sighting is undergoing usual scrutiny before being accepted as an official record, although bird experts believe it will pass muster and be admitted into the record books. Sanchez is working with the Oregon Bird Records Committee to provide as much detail as possible.
Sanchez describes himself as a “graduate of YouTube University” and says he likes to get out a few times a week to take photos. “You can learn all the theory, but in practice, that’s when you really learn what works and what doesn’t,” the novice shooter says.
It was partially his thirst for knowledge and passion for improving his photography that led to his incredible sighting. He says that he was recommended to go to Hug Point because he told some fellow photographers in an online forum that he was headed to Cannon Beach to do landscape shooting, and they pointed him toward Hug Point for landscape opportunities.
“They said, ‘There are some waterfalls there,’ so I go, ‘Oh, great. I’ll show up, I’ll do a long exposure — try to get nice silky water and all that,’” Sanchez says. “The damnedest thing about it is that none of the waterfall pictures turned out, but I think I made out in the deal.”
Michael Sanchez made out in the deal and then some, capturing a once-in-a-lifetime shot of a beautiful bird far from home.
Image credits: Photos by Michael Sanchez