Old thread here: http://www.rspb.org.uk/community/chat/f/2542/t/22684.aspx
Because the original thread has, fittingly enough, 'gone bad', it's time for a new 'Bad pics' thread. Here, we celebrate the very worst of our wildlife photography. The subject matter is always brilliant, but the photos are very much not. If it's out of focus, chopped in half, frighteningly under- or over-exposed or terrible in some other way, it belongs here :)
Here's my first (first of many, no doubt) contribution to the new thread, a Goldcrest taken at Barnes yesterday. You need only minor incompetence to take a blurry photo, and the same to take a really under-exposed photo, but to do both in one go requires a special level of cackhandedness.
My blog: http://mazzaswildside.blogspot.co.uk/
My Flickr page: https://www.flickr.com/photos/124028194@N04/
(Pardon the Scottish Accent)
The usual twig trouble with a blackcap in the garden. Hadn't seen one for quite a while before this one turned up a couple of days ago.
I couldn't not put this one in here
And just missed the Kestrel sitting on a fence post!!!
Think I got this a bit wrong ...
Hmmm, someone turned just at the last second!
Mike
Flickr: Peak Rambler
Why do I always think it's a good idea to try and get photos of Rock pips in kelp
Cin J
It certainly is well hidden. I have found one Rock pip and a cigarrete end. Any advance ...