28 Nov 2008

My Local Patch Killard Nature reserve again!!! and a photogenic Greenshank

I came home from work at about midday and it was absolutely beautiful so grabbed the camera and dog and headed out to Killard. The tide was high which meant that any waders should have been pushed upto the shoreline. I generally do a loop of about two and a half miles which takes me out to Ben Derg Beach and then I follow the coast back to the car. As there were cows in a field I cross I decided to stick to the shoreline and I put up a snipe.I rapidly fired off a few shots at it but this was the only one in focus. They move pretty fast. it always surprises me in open ground how one rarely sees the bird before it gets up. They are well camouflaged.


The wind was pretty strong and it was about 5ºC so pretty chilly similar to a couple of days earlier that I had been out when I thought I saw an otter in the sea. I moved round to where I had seen it and then I saw it on a little island that appears at low tide. I moved to within about 30 yards and and it promptly curled up and went to sleep on top of some seaweed.


Well I waited for nearly an hour for it to wake up and hopefully get some shots of it. At about an hour my hands were so cold that I gave up.
I had brought gloves with me this time. There were alot of Common Gulls flying into the wind and some were feeding on the shoreline.

The Redshanks were also flying off in alarm as I approached. Their call seems to be far too noisy for the threat that they are under.


I found an area to lie down on the seaweed and start photographing the Purple Sandpipers and Turnstones. You can get remarkably close to both of these birds if you creep forward and lie still for any amount of time. I have in the past have had them as close as four feet and this was with my dog in the background.




As I was lying there I heard the alarm call of a Greenshank some way away and was delighted that it landed about twenty yards further down the shoreline from me and then made its way towards me walking in and out of the surf and feeding. Now a Greenshank is a bird that on the whole is pretty shy and not easy to get close to. So I was pretty pleased with the following shots.









Now Pickle had been very patient waiting behind me for over an hour and her patience ran out and she decided to go into the water and all the birds flew off.

I headed home stopping off at a little bay which can be brilliant for waders and I wasn't disappointed. There were Dunlin, Ringed Plover, Lapwing, Golden Plover, Greenshank, Redshank, Curlew, Turnstones and Brent Geese. So I went out into the bay as the tide was falling fast and got some shots of Dunlin and Golden Plover.




If you click on any photos they come up in a seperate screen.

The other Bird News I have is that i was sent a copy of Birdguides British Birds Video Guide - 270 species edition


For this new British Birds guide on DVD Birdguides have started from the ground up, selecting the very best footage from hundreds of hours in their film library, much of it recently captured on HD cameras. It is their flagship edition running over 16 hours and covering 270 species on 4 DVDs. With all-new commentaries by Dave Gosney, revised maps, songs, calls and the use of freeze frames and split screen to help explain identification points.

I was sent it because they used my photos of Sooty Shearwater and Great Shearwater in the DVD. So pretty pleased with that!!

1 comment:

Gyorgy Szimuly (SzimiStyle) said...

Lovely flight images of Golden Plovers. Are they full frames?

Szimi