Wildflower competition entry

Wakefield Camera Club, of which I am a member, are running a new competition to commemorate the passing of life member Maurice Biglin who spent many a happy hour photographing wild flowers. The competition is a print competition and members can enter up to three prints depicting British wild flowers. So, I thought I have a go and here is the first of my entries – a cowslip photographed at Brockadale YWT reserve earlier this year. This image has been heavily processed specifically for the comp and I’ve tried to make it more of a fine art print than a pure nature shot. Haven’t decided on my other two entries yet!
STOP PRESS! Finally decided on the other two entires – selfheal and green-winged orchid. Here are the final edits.

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Common Buzzard bathing

Over the last 10yrs or so, common buzzard has become, well, common! This species was such a rare bird in West Yorkshire that it would have been highly twitchable in the old days but the common buzzard is an avian success story and has spread across much of the country, let alone our county. The big increase in numbers means I am seeing buzzards most days and they’ve certainly become an established breeding bird locally. Like all birds of prey, buzzards like a good freshwater bath to keep the feathers in good condition. Here, an adult bird keeps a wary eye out as it stands in a flooded field to bathe.

 

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Pectoral Sandpiper at Pugneys Country Park

Got an email last night to say a pectoral sandpiper was at the local country park lake and then today, a phone call from Mike to say it was still there. So, late this afternoon, I gave up on the wedding edits and headed down to Pugneys Country Park in Wakefield to see if I could get some record shots of this American vagrant. Strangely enough, this is the second specimen of this bird I’ve seen in Wakefield having seen the one at Anglers CP way back in the 80s. Pectoral sandpipers, or ‘Pecs’ as we birders call them, are breeding birds in North America and it is likely that this bird got blown across here in the tail-end gales of the hurricane that hit the US a couple of weeks back and will have been in the UK for a while now going about its business unseen until a keen eyed birder spotted it on the lake shore. The bird gets its name from the strongly marked breast where the speckling ends abruptly across its pectoral region. I used a low view point and a 500mm lens to get some nice frame fillers by simply lying on the ground and letting the bird approach me. Pecs are notoriously tame and show no fear of humans, though it did seem very wary of the local Canada geese! I’ve added a short video clip at the end of the post to give a flavour of the bird in action.

Pectoral sandpiper at Pugneys Country Park, Wakefield

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Shelduck Landing

Shelduck coming into land at Martin Mere WWT reserve. Each evening the sky is full of them as they fly into the reserve to rest and feed. A great way of practicing flight photography! Nikon D3, Nikkor 500mm f/4 lens handheld

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Comma on blackberry

The warm September sun (around 26dgC today!) always brings the comma butterflies to the blackberries to feed. These uniquely-shaped butterflies spend the winter in a shed or other dark place and os need to build up sugar reserves to last them the winter without having to wake. The comma gets its name from the white mark on the underside of the wing which resembles the comma punctuation mark. Here I used a 105 macro lens, hand-held to give me freedom to get round the insects and shoot at different angles. I’ll put a few more in the butterflies gallery very shortly.

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