Tag Archives: badger

Jackdaws at Dawn

More grey skies and gloom, but the local jackdaws were enjoying themselves in St Laurence churchyard at Falmer this morning. There’s a healthy colony (or ‘clattering’) of them there, and their chattering calls ring through the air in competition with the ever-present squawking gulls.

Jackdaws

Jackdaws

Jackdaws

Jackdaws

Jackdaws

No foxes at Falmer today, but Pretty has been in and out of the garden. We’ve even had a badger come by. It dashed up the steps (all of two or three feet from me) and scurried to the far end of the garden before I could even remove the lens cap. It’s always an absolute pleasure to see a badger close-up, even when the sighting is as fleeting as the one tonight.

Pretty is somewhat more cooperative with the camera, so here she is!

Foxes

Camera note: jackdaw photos taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens. Fox photographed with the EF 24-105 F4L IS USM lens.

Posted in Badger, Birds, Foxes Also tagged , |

Passing Badger

Along with the foxes that use the garden at night, a badger has been an irregular visitor through the winter. Here are a couple of photos caught on the trail camera.

Badger

Badger

And while I’m here, one of the foxes (not Pretty this time) seen during the day on New Year’s Eve.

Fox

It’s very wet and windy outside as I write this, and there’s more heavy rain on the way.

All images from the Bushnell Trophy Cam HD.

Posted in Badger, Foxes

A Surprise on the Farm (and badger cull update)

The surprise in the title came later in the day, but the pond had its own surprise this morning: there were more than 50 greylag geese gracing the surface. The light was appalling so I’ve very few shots of them (and they were never all in frame together), but it was lovely to see so many in one place. Usually there are around a dozen, but these mini-invasions happen every now and then.

Greylag Geese

Yes, I went all arty and tried for a motion-blur shot of them. 😉

Greylag Geese

The weather had improved by lunchtime. Still overcast, but the brighter weather that is bringing with it a drop in temperature was beginning to penetrate the south. I headed over to local farmland where there are plenty of grazing sheep at this time of year.

Sheep on the South Downs

Sheep on the South Downs

I was pleased with the shots I was getting, but some distant movement caused me to abandon the nearby sheep and look across the field.

Roe deer and sheep on the South Downs

There were actually three roe deer out in the field, but they kept far enough apart to avoid the group shot. Two of them quickly retreated, but one remained in long-lens distance while it sought out good forage.

Roe deer and sheep on the South Downs

After several minutes it retreated to the fence line.

Roe deer and sheep on the South Downs

It searched up and down for a few moments, pausing to look over the fence, but then found its escape route. Up and over!

Roe deer on the South Downs

On other fronts, the good news is that the badger cull has been abandoned for now. It will stop tomorrow at midday. It was due to continue for another three weeks, but the abject failure of the policy has resulted in it being called off for this year.

This – at the moment – is only a temporary reprieve. The trial (which is what it was meant to be) has failed to hit every single target it was set, both in numbers of badgers shot (they fell well short), for method of shooting (free shooting was an abject failure because badgers don’t stand still), and length of time and cost (the former overran significantly, which means the cost must have done the same).

The next stage in this sorry saga will be the publication (or not) of the independent report on how humane and effective the trial method was, not that the Minister will take any notice of scientific evidence. Then the arguments will start all over again as the government tries to press forward with this absurd and wholly irrational cull. Meanwhile Wales presses ahead with a badger vaccination programme. We really should be doing the same.

But from tomorrow, and for a while, our badgers will hopefully have a quieter (and successful) breeding season.Badger

Camera note: all photos 9apart from the badger) taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens. The badger was photographed with the EF 200mm f/2.8L II USM lens.

Posted in Badger, deer, Sheep, water birds Also tagged , , |