Showing posts with label Scarce Swallowtail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scarce Swallowtail. Show all posts

Monday, 31 December 2012

2012...The Year That Was


Ah 2012...the year of the Olympics, the Leveson Enquiry and the final series of The Thick of It, but it was more than that really. I've been busy this year with my GCSEs, sitting exams in January and the June to get some rather pleasing results in August. I saw The Stone Roses live. And Noel Gallagher. I was *that* close to getting a drumstick at The Enemy when they played the academy. And I spent a cumulative total of around 5 days taking photos. So t'wasn't too bad really.

So I thought, what with this being the eve of 2013 and the Fiscal Cliff (scary eh?) I better get on with it and write it down, like an egalitarian online version of Samuel Peeps. Minus the massive wig, obviously. So without further ado, get yourself an eggnog (or a glass of water. Or nothing. I'm not forcing you.) and let me regale with tales of bygone days spent out in the field...

I'm going with one photo per month, so for January I go back to my old house. The wind whistles and moans, the trees gnarled (well one of them was a bit gnarled) and the rain lashes the windows. I'm at the kitchen window, with GCSE Biology on my lap and a mug of tea in my hand, but outside there is something altogether more interesting (seriously!). A goldfinch sits on a piece of string, the only redeeming feature of the day. Through an act of contortion through an open window I get shots off, and that's my day sorted. Revision is so underrated...


February cleared everything up, out in the field I was with a brew in one hand and my glass in the other. Sat in a bush in Conwy, patiently waiting for a certain owl to show. No gloves too in sub-zero temperatures, I hasten to add. Thank God that Shortie showed was all I could say, although it took me several days to say it due to my development of what a hypochondriac like myself would called pneumonia...


...March came in like a Lion and left still very much like a Lion, if by Lion you mean a near-constant thunderstorm inter spliced with the odd clear patch and some frogs procreating in the back garden. I think my definition of a Lion is a bit off. Ah well, it was fun whilst the spawning lasted...!


...April came just 31 days after March, and with it a trip to meet world-famous wildlife photographer Andy Hay. It was a humbling but ultimately interesting experience meeting someone so much better than myself, but a good time was had by all and I finally got that Yellowhammer shot i've always wanted...!


...May came and along with it a crappy speech from the Headmaster followed by being booted out of school for study leave. Roll on I said, and I was right to be so happy with happenings for I had some belting macro shots from the garden. But the unequivocal highlight of May was a belting experience with the Redstarts of Derbyshire...


But, just like that, June was upon us and I found myself in a new house and my exams over! So off I pottered to Shetland, my year's highlight by an absolute country mile. Some belting shots and species to boot, with great weather and food...


...but as June melted into July all was not lost for I was off to the Pyrenees for a week of, as I said afterwards, birds, bikes and norovirus. Aside the last one that was a belter of a trip, with some good shots and new birds...including this rather fetching Rock Sparrow...


The next month was August and with this change came the hatching of the pupae found in my stomach into beautiful butterflies. Yup, exam season was on. Still, sitting on a campsite with my mates, 2 random people from Grimsby and an unconscious brummy made me forget this somewhat, as did a family holiday to Andalucia, where this Scarce Swallowtail was a surefire favourite...


But alas the four months of holiday were gone, to be replaced with the murk of September. This saw me once more on Hilbre camera in hand and amongst my favourite birds, the Dunlin...


More fun was to occur in October with a trip up north of the border to Inverness, and another stint on Hilbre with this memorable Redshank shot the best of the day...


....then back to the exams again, like hitting a brick wall but with less physical pain and more subtle references to how university application is inextricably linked to THIS VERY EXAM! So no 'true' trips out, just a shedload of Waxwings over Manchester and the North-West, what beauties...!



...so here we are again. A year of birds, butterflies and (for the first time) beer! Still quite excited about that last one. Still, we stand on the brink of a new year, but to be honest its going to be pretty much the same as the last so don't get too excited. Have a good'n and see you all on the other side. :)

Saturday, 29 September 2012

'Every Cloud an' All'

Well of late I have engaged my hidden talent of moaning my adolecent face off at the state of my hard drive. However, it is through this blog that the situation has been kept in check. I have, on this blog, uploaded a great many of my shots and whilst you've seen most I keep some 'reserve' posts for when i'm dying from withdrawal symptoms. You'll see these posts as they tend not to fit the season and are a bit aimless. Still, there's one post I kept back, and i'm so glad I did...

...Andalucia! I went to the Costa Del Sol! Officially the most unemployed district of Spain, 30 years ago it had 50% illiteracy rates and the temperature gets to 43 degrees every day. Perfect for wildlife. However, one fact I should disclose is that my best shots were of Spotted Flycatchers and were never saved so what you have here is the dregs. Still, they're quite good for 'dregs'. Let's start off with this young Spanish Sparrow...


...that last shot's an interesting one. That bird isn't calling. Or eating. Its panting, the birds here genuinely go round with their mouths open to lose heat. Its a bit surreal to see all these gaping sparrows, but not as surreal as seeing these birds. Before this holiday i'd seen Bee Eaters only in the Pyrenees, but never got close enough for a good shot. That's still true, but got some passable images of a perched distant one..


...a truly beautiful creature, I wish I could aquaint myself with these birds on a more regular basis. I did get a little closer, but the angle's not great. Grrr...




But I am a gambler. My wildlife kit weighs in at about 5kg and sits on the small of my back. It has, in its short existence, climbed about 10,000ft, accended the world famous Tourmalet on a bike, has been in a river (thankfully for a short period), visited Shetland and has now been to the tourists sites of Southern Spain. Why am I a gambler? That's an awful dead weight as you're wandering round the Alhambra (yes I thought it was in Bradford too), but I was (for the first time ever) rewarded for my exertions with this...


This shot's Exif:

1/400
f7.1
ISO 3200

It was taken on our only dull day, and in dense coniferous woodland I found shutter speeds a real struggle. Still, an absolute gem of a bird, as was my next Alhambra find...


You have no idea how much i've wanted to see one of these up close, then there's one outside the gift shop! Amazing stuff...


Another bird i've always wanted to photograph is the Griffon Vulture, this was not my lucky trip in the end. However, it was the end of a wait for another species; the Rock Bunting. Its not an easy subject, they're tricky to locate, but fairly accomodating (even if they stick to the shade from the ferrocious midday sun!)...




Perhaps my experience of the trip was pulling over to watch a Booted Eagle, whereupon it stooped into the olive grove near to me, whereupon it rose up and circled me. At midday the shots clearly aren't the best but i've never had anything like that happen, truly memorable...



But its not just birds in this cradle of life, the invertibrae front is good too (even if the ID of this fella escapes me)...


...but I say with as much certainty as a vegan cheetah that this is certainly a Scarce Swallowtail...


....not bad for the oul' sigma at 400mm! And a good trip for me too! I have to say that the lifestyle's quite agreeable, as is the food and the birding! Perhaps one day i'll return without my family in toe, get up at 3am and look for these creatures in the golden hours. Perhaps I won't. But for a 2 week family holiday cut short by a music festival it wasn't half bad. I think there's one more summer post to conclude the last 4 months, but I think that shall wait.