Birds in a panorama – 10,000 Birds


I’m actually a birdwatcher, not a chook photographer, although lately I often carry a digicam. I accomplish that for a wide range of causes, however I admit to a powerful searching intuition, so I take pleasure in capturing pictures (trophies?), of the birds I encounter. It’s satisfying to come back again from a day’s birding, obtain my pictures on to my iPad, and relive the thrill of every encounter.

Like most individuals who {photograph} birds, I take advantage of a protracted lens to allow me to seize portraits of the birds I level the digicam at. OK, that sounds as if I’m stating the apparent, nevertheless it’s satisfying to see my topic fill the body. It’s why I take advantage of a protracted lens, and I usually want it was even longer. Nevertheless, it was studying my fellow contributor Faraaz Abool’s latest account of his exploits in Costa Rica (Birding the slopes of the Turiabla Volcano) that jogged my memory that footage of birds of their habitat inform you a fantastic deal that pure portraits fail to do. 

Faraaz’s type  is to image a chook in its panorama, and as his work reveals, such pictures may be each efficient and evocative.  It prompted me to trawl by my image library and pull out a sequence of birds in landscapes. I’ve by no means revealed any of them earlier than. None are significantly thrilling, however I hope that you just discover them attention-grabbing, and would welcome feedback on them. Maybe I ought to put extra effort into taking extra of those footage, or ought to I stick with portraits?

A Whimbrel on migration. North Norfolk, UK, Could. We consider Whimbrels as shore birds, however on migration they usually come inland

Better Flamingoes. Greece, December. The sky was threatening a storm, however the Flamingoes had been illuminated by a low solar

Searching Barn Owl. Suffolk, UK, June. In England Barn Owls regularly hunt in daylight. This chook was photographed late on a protracted June night

Cuckoo, Southern Caucasus, Could. A uncommon alternative to {photograph} a Cuckoo from above. The immense mountains are a reminder of the obstacles dealing with migrant birds

Pied Wheatear, southern Georgia, Could. These wheatears had been breeding in an intensive space of scrubby, arid steppe that jogged my memory of elements of East Africa

Frequent Redstart, Georgia, Could. The leaves had been simply beginning to unfurl. In one other week it could have been a lot more durable to identify, and {photograph}, this chook

Migrating Swallow, Halkadiki, Greece, Could. A reminder that migrating Swallows need to cross nice expanses of sea

Chiffchaff, Suffolk, UK, October. This one was in my backyard. The yellow leaves of autumn gave it close to good camouflage

Nice Gray Shrike, Rajasthan, India, March. Shrikes are typical birds of open areas. That is reasonably a boring {photograph}, nevertheless it jogs my memory of the remarkably bird-rich agricultural panorama of this a part of northern India

A Northern Wheatear on its breeding grounds, Galicia, June. Galicia is named Inexperienced Spain for a very good purpose, as this {photograph} reveals

Northern Wheatear, Menorca, Spain, September. A migrant, heading south. The dry-stone wall makes a gorgeous perch

Noticed Flycatcher, Poland, Could. In early spring Polish woods are a particular shiny shade of inexperienced

White-eyed Kestrels, Etosha, Namibia, February. Have been they nesting right here?

Jackdaws accumulating fur for his or her nest, Andalucía, Spain, April. Digiscoped. The cow appeared fairly unbothered by the Jackdaws

Blackgrouse, Arctic Finland, March. This was additionally digiscoped – the birds had been very distant. It’s an image that evokes, for me, the nippiness of the Arctic in winter

White-throated Kingfisher, Sultanpur Chicken Sanctuary, India, early February. Winter days right here are sometimes uninteresting and misty

The identical chook as above – not cropped. I walked nearer. I discover the panorama image extra attention-grabbing

Kittiwake, Lowestoft, UK, April. Kittiwakes are ocean-going birds, however they nest on buildings in Lowestoft, so you could have the bizarre sight of a correct sea chook flying alongside city streets

Frequent Tern, Peraia, Greece, April. I’ve a lot better photographs of the tern, however I just like the setting

Low tide, with Little Egret and Black-headed Gull. North Norfolk, July. It’s an image of mud and water, the birds are incidental

A Curlew on the tideline. North Norfolk, November. Not a fantastic shot of the Curlew, however that is how we so usually see them

Black-winged Kite and wind turbine, Andalucía, October. A reminder of the harmful world birds dwell in



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