Barn Owl, Eldernell, Peterborough |
Welcome to my Web Site which is a photographic record of my interest in Wildlife, particularly with Birds . Todate my wildlife images have appeared in various books and magazines including, Birdwatch, Birding World, Outdoor Adventure Guide, British Birds, The Birding Year Book, Birdwatching, American Birding Association, Birds Illustrated and Bird Art & Photography and also on numerous Web Sites including those of the RSPB. .
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Sunday, January 25, 2015
Friday, January 16, 2015
Monday, January 05, 2015
Sunday, January 04, 2015
Saturday, January 03, 2015
Little Bustard
Little Bustard, Fraisthorpe, E Yorks. Very occasionally showing like this. Photo courtesy of Tony Dixon |
Approx. 1400 people at Twitch on Thursday First Jan. Promises to be a good year! |
A more normal view in the Kale field |
Disappeared overnight
Rumours that the farmer shot the Bustard overnight are unfounded. He now wears a super headdress of white brown and black feathers though!
Below is an extract from the Blog of a birding friend from Essex
Yorkshire and in particular East Yorkshire has been very hit and miss for me in terms of connecting with rare birds. A round trip from Essex/east London is a good 9 hours in the car and well over 400 miles so a twitch that far north has to carefully considered. In facr my first three twitches to East Yorks, all, yes ALL/100%, ended in dips. Pechora Pipt, Brown Shrike and Brown Flycatcher all ended in disappointment, but at least I have seen a Brown Shrike (London) and Pechora Pipit (Unst, Shetland) since. My last two adventures to East Yorks have actually been very successful with a memorable twitch for Ivory Gull and just a few months ago, Masked Shrike, so when a Little Bustard showed up on New Year's Eve I was up for another long trip north.
My partner in crime on this occasion was Lee Brown. I could go on 1st Jan but had plans to see the New Year in with my family and close friends Jack Daniels and Stella, and anyway, I doubted it would still be there the next day, so it was decided, if it was still there at dusk on 1st Jan we'd be there for first light on the 2nd. I was toying with going on news but that is equally risky with limited day light hours at this time of year and it being a pig of a journey when jo public have gotten out of bed and are on their way to some shopping mall or other.
The added bonus of the trip was in the form of a mega eare Blyth's Pipit 90 minutes from the Bustard site in West Yorkshire. Easy, tick the Bustard by 9am, see the Pipit by midday and be on the way home by early afternoon.
Lee picked me up at 4am. I think I had about 30 minutes sleep so felt terrible, not helped by a cold that had been passed to me by my Mrs. Four and a half hours later via a trip the wrong way over the Humber Bridge we arrived on site. Already in position around 100 very cold birders. It didn't look good. Scopes scanned the field the bird was last seen in from all angles. If it was there surely it would be obvious. A very cold hour later it was obvious. The bird was gone, dead, who knows. Bollocks.
And finally, as the day wore on I heard rumours from a few people that the farmer who owned the field that the Bustard had been in had deliberately flushed the bird after dark after poor behaviour from a small minority of birders on site the previous day, including blocking the entrance to his farm with inconsiderate parking and then his wife being verbally abused when she asked for the car/s to be moved. Who knows if this is true. If it is I just wish he'd told people he was going to do it to save me a long journey and another East Yorkshire dip.
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