I just wanted to add 1 quick observation. The way that the bird feeder shows up so dark in the blurry photo tells you that it is probably a light problem. Not enough exposure. I copied the tiny jpeg from your post and used a simple free program to lighten it, and the bird feeder shows up as brightly as in the other pic. I used Paint.net. You would get better results with your original photo. You can sometimes salvage a shot by using software. Especially if you capture a rare site that can't be easily duplicated.
There is a nice feature in Windows 10 where you can select 2 photos in a folder, then right click and select print, it opens up a nice little program where you can select to print the 2 photos on 1 page. A few other multiple photo options there too. Definitely saves on paper. Just need to hold the shift button when selecting the multiple pictures in the folder.
I don't own a Mac, but I've read that you can open your raw photos in Preview and then export them to jpg. I use Irfanview on Window for batch converting, and sometimes Gimp. A raw file is big, and jpg is much smaller, so the quality between the two will always be different, but jpg files can be very good. I tend most often to convert to png format instead. Bigger than jpg files, but still nicely compressed. Good instructions on Preview here:
http://osxdaily.com/2013/01/16/batch-image-conversion-mac-os-x-preview/I would experiment with different formats to see which is best for you.