Odds & Sods 2023

After yet another successful year on the Odds & Sods thread, initially started I think by Hazy, it might be wise to kickstart the 2023 thread off.

Thank you to those who have contributed to last years thread, and there has been very interesting odds and sods in "Odds & Sods 2022" that aren't enough to place into a dedicated thread, which you can look back on the following link:

https://community.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/f/all-creatures/278729/odds-sods-2022/1417300?pifragment-4285=76#pifragment-4285=1

What better for me, and as yet, I've not ventured far, ewe know what I mean, with this lassie on Baddesley Clinton estate yesterday....

  • Yes PB it was. They weren't taken to stack, but out of the two images one had slightly better focus on the apple and the other on the leaf, so I used photo stacking in Photoshop.
  • Thanks Bob. I've only ever seen a few owls, and then I go and see 2 in a couple of weeks ... Slight smile

  • Good photo's PB. I like the Tawny Owl, I have not yet managed to see one.
  • Couple of photo's from here and there

    Robin

    Magpie

    And a yellowhammer, first decent picture I've managed to get of one!

    Regards

    Benji

  • He will get indigestion doing that ... Laughing

  • Just some photos from a meadow field wander earlier this month.

    A juvenile moorhen among the small lake plants

    Might be a white tailed bumblebee, among the meadow flowers by the small lake

    and a short trip to Brandon Marsh

    a male tufted duck

    lapwing

    moorhen on the nest

    I'm tempted to think the water levels are either intentionally low or seasonal evaporation has revealed the motar blocks, which have made a solid nest base.

    avocet with male tufted duck for size comparison. You don't realise how small some birds are until they appear close to others.

    avocet

    most likely a common blue, male

    swallow, from a conversation with another regular, (not the same guy on my last visit) male according to his observations, and note there is a missing lefthand tail fork feather!

    I did try a few inflight photos, but all blue sky or green tree leaves. Even zooming out didn't make much difference 

    regards

    John

  • Oh I have yet to get a swallow sitting at peace!
    Lovely set ...thanks for sharing

    (Pardon the Scottish Accent)

  • Great Photos John, nice to see the Avocet, I have a photo similar to your swallow, never photographed one in flight yet either. I also liked the bee photo and the Moorhen on the Lily pads. Thanks for sharing John.
  • Fabulous photos Bob!! Thanks for sharing these with us...I love the badger...so cute Well done!
  • A few from Moor Green Lakes nature reserve during my weekly stomp to check up on restoration progress.

    Let's start with a cutie, possibly from this year's clutch.

    Common terns weren't cooperating this morning, staying well out of range.

    I saw Greylag geese swimming in large armadas last year. They are doing same this year. I spied this lot, way across Colebrook lake south.

    Two Carrion crow having a chat. What they are standing on is a re-cycled bridge. The bridge was used by lorries to drive over a conveyor belt which ferried gravel from the Fleet hill farm extraction site, across the Manor farm extraction site, turning sharp right to go over the Blackwater river to the processing site on Chandlers farm.

    Inert have reused this bridge to straddle the reinstated (sort of) Colebrook cut (i.e. stream) which used to carry water from east to west. I did wonder why they didn't remove it from the restoration when they decommissioned it.

    90% luck, 5% field craft, 5% camera skills.