Author Archives: Words

The Fox has a Ball

Yes the fox really does have a ball. It’s of the yellow tennis variety and appeared in the garden a few weeks ago. Every now and then it moves. When she’s not being watched she likes to play with it, throwing and chasing it around, just like a dog. I’ve yet to capture the more frenetic activity on camera, but when I was going through the most recent trail cam clips I came across this.

And here’s the star of the video from earlier today. She’s still limping on her rear leg but as I’ve said so many times before, if a fox doesn’t limp every now and then, it’s not really a fox!

fox limping

fox

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM lens.

Posted in Behaviour, Foxes

Four Pretty Pictures (fox special)

Another beautiful early winter day. Cold, but clear skies and low sunshine that provided some beautiful light. All it needed was a fox, and luckily Pretty was on hand to complete the scene.

In this first shot she’s holding her rear leg up as she walks. Obviously a minor injury (she was using it most of the time), but she also has a small wound on her back, which suggests she’s been getting into a few scrapes as the dispersal season takes hold.

fox

Her brush is also looking a little ragged.

fox

She still a very pretty fox though.

fox

And quite contented too!

fox

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM lens.

Posted in Foxes Tagged |

Photographing Gulls in Poor Light

I’ve run posts like this before, but it’s been quite a long time since I’ve deliberately set out to take a sequence of motion-blur photos, so apologies for any repetition of (or contradiction with) anything I might have said before.

At this time of year the early morning sunlight can be amazing, but if it’s overcast the light disappears to almost nothing. There are two choices: crank up the ISO and do your best with slowish shutter speeds (1/50-1/200s) to get something reasonably sharp; or take the hint and rather than fight the conditions let them work for you and go for really slow speeds. Today was a dull day and after struggling to beat the conditions I decided to ‘go slow’. What gets lost in the detail is more than compensated for by the vivid sense of movement. I was aided by some locals throwing bread to the gulls, creating the flurry of activity.

For the technically minded these were all taken at ISO 100, and the shutter speed hovers between 1/10s and 1/13s. Light conditions can fluctuate quite a lot so I juggled with the aperture to keep the speed nice and slow. Fully manual settings are ideal for this sort of thing and if I’d been more awake at the time I’d have set the camera up that way.

Motion blur photo of gulls

Motion blur photo of gulls

Motion blur photo of gulls

The gulls are mainly black-head gulls, but there are some juvenile herring gulls in there somewhere. There’s also a stray duck in the second photo.

Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Posted in Uncategorized, water birds Tagged , , |