Just some simple shots from yesterday and today.
Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.
Just some simple shots from yesterday and today.
Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.
Odd weather we’re having. It’s much cooler than it is supposed to be at this time of year, but the sun was out this morning and I arrived at falmer Pond just in time to see the local heron landing gracefully on the island tree.
I was keeping my eyes open for rats scurrying around the fringes of the pond, and I thought I’d spotted one on the far side but it turned out to be a squirrel which had ventured down to the edge of the water for an early morning drink.
The rats did, however, show up at lunchtime. Not in their usual waterside runs, but foraging in the wooded area behind the pond. I watched for several minutes as it dug for roots and seeds in the soft earth, but it was eventually scared away by an elderly dog-walker.
Camera note: all photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 400mm f/5.6L USM lens.
They are all fairly common animals, but it is still something of a rarity to see four different mammal species in one day. And I wasn’t even trying (really). The first two are fairly obvious choices. There are always rabbits to be seen in the fields and the churchyard at Falmer. This pair were out enjoying the morning sunshine.
Now you know my location, the second mammal is probably not too hard to guess. Here it is peeping out its rat run which runs underneath the banks of the pond.
Rats are naturally very cautious (neophobic) but given their location they have become somewhat habituated to a human presence and as long as you don’t move around too much they’ll venture out into the daylight.
Those photos were all taken early in the morning, before work. The next one was a bit of a surprise. A squirrel hanging upside down on a tree. It’s taken in the car park at work and I noticed it as I drove in. Although we do have plenty of squirrels around, woodland squirrels are extremely cautious (utterly unlike their city-park cousins) so I was pleased this one stayed put long enough for me to park and get out the camera. By the way, despite the reddish fur, this is definitely a grey squirrel. We don’t have any reds in this part of the country.
While a (reddish) grey squirrel may have been unexpected, the final mammal certainly isn’t. We’ve just been listening to the foxes calling to each other across the gardens. Here’s ‘nicked-ear’ from earlier this evening.
Camera note: all daytime photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 400mm f/5.6L USM lens. The fox was photographed with the EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM lens.
Copyright Paul Cecil 2021 | Powered by Photocrati