Category Archives: water birds

Duck Goose Sheep

Not a great deal to set pulses racing today, just a few portrait-style shots (if a flying duck counts as a portrait).

Mallard duck in flight

This greylag goose adopted a more conventional pose.

Greylag goose

And now the sheep, one of a small flock in the field at the edge of the car park at work.

sheep

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

Also posted in Sheep Tagged , , |

Rottingdean Fulmar Attacked by Jackdaw (photo sequence)

I was down at Rottingdean fairly early this morning, on an errand but while I was there I headed down to the cliffs to check out the local fulmars. This is a good time of year to watch them as they prepare for breeding. There were plenty of them about, flying out over the sea and then doing their typical skimming along the cliffs trying to find a foothold.

Fulmar at Rottingdean

The usual pattern when they try to land is to fly up to the cliff face, turn away, fly a circuit and then try again. They have very weak legs and need to get their landing exactly right. It’s not always easy. I watched several fulmars play this game. Usually they are aiming at a nesting site but just occasionally they pick the wrong spot. As this one did. Here it is making touchdown on the cliff face.

Fulmar approaching a nesting hole

Fulmar approaching a nesting hole

Usually at that point it would either abort the landing, or settle. On this occasion it had chosen the wrong hole. This particular cavity in the cliff was already taken… by a jackdaw; and it was not happy about the uninvited guest. Jackdaws can be very aggressive, even with each other, as the fulmar was about to discover. This is what happened next.

Fulmar being attacked by a jackdaw

Fulmar being attacked by a jackdaw

Fulmar being attacked by a jackdaw

Fulmar being attacked by a jackdaw

Fulmar being attacked by a jackdaw

Fulmar being attacked by a jackdaw

After they separated the fulmar headed out to sea and the jackdaw returned to its roost.

As well as the fulmars and jackdaws, the cliffs are home to pipits, starlings and pigeons and so minor confrontations are common on the cliffs. Usually though, it’s a case of which bird can shout the loudest and longest. Fulmars invariably win that kind of contest!

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

Also posted in Birds Tagged , , |

Four Bird Photos

Another very simple blog entry. Four of the local birds around Falmer Pond. All very usual subjects (two ducks, a blackbird and a blue tit), but it’s sometimes worth concentrating on the more commonplace. I’ll start with the blue tit, a subject I hope to be seeing a lot more of in the coming weeks.

Blue tit

That photo was marred by the intervening branches on the trees. Try as I might I couldn’t get a perfect line. I had better luck with this young male blackbird which was still sporting touches of juvenile brown in its plumage.

Blackbird

And so to the ducks. I took several similar shots to this one. It’s the larger of the white ducks out on the small island in the centre of Falmer Pond.

White duck

To close, a simple shot of a female mallard which I’m going to call ‘Happy Landings’ (for fairly obvious reasons).

Duck landing in pond

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

Also posted in Birds Tagged , , |