#i think all birds are special and i adore all the raptors that i’ve worked with but i love when they’re very obviously smart
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This art is so cuteeee 🥰 fav BOP is a very tough choice but Eurasian Kestrel! The reasoning is in the tags because I intended it to be a short explanation and wound up rambling, oopsie
Heres my girlie and the main reason behind the favouritism lol; she’s a year and a half old Eurasian Kestrel and owns my heart and soul! (Last pic was with her juvenile plumage)
american kestrel
tell me your favorite bird of prey :-)
#LOOK AT THE BABIESSS#this is tough#i have my own eurasian kestrel and she is everything so im biased here#i have a lot of favourites though#the runner up is harris hawks because theyre so intelligent and their flight ability is gorgeous and theyre so fun to train#i will say i prefer the call of harris hawks because my kestrel shrieks and it bursts my ear drums </3#a lot of owls cause theyre so beautiful and i love their temperament but also each is very unique and you get to form a bond with each one#ultimately eurasian kestrel is gonna have to win though cause they do a bit of everything that i love about falcons hawks and owls respecti#long wings generally cant be taught “tricks” but kestrels can be— i mean have you SEEN them hovering? they have a lot of manoeuvrability to#you can also do lure work with a kestrel so arabic style lure swinging rather than just as a recall like most hawks#another thing is weight management and feeding schedules compared to bigger falcons like sakers peregrines lanners etc#the rule i was taught with longwings is to feed once a day w/ a big reward#while there are exceptions they generally dont respond that well to small pieces and multiple flights whereas hawks and owls will#kestrels are an exception and do well with that training style#also eurasian kestrels will respond to food even if they’re not necessarily very hungry same as with hawks#which means you can do multiple flights a day and train both short and long distances#you could argue that their size is a disadvantage but personally i really enjoy microfalconry#size doesn't matter (bird edition)#although flying a big hawk owl eagle or gyr will always have a certain <33333 to it i’ll admit#also in my experience kestrels have that intelligence and sociability and variety that you see with owls and a lot of hawks#i think all birds are special and i adore all the raptors that i’ve worked with but i love when they’re very obviously smart#you look in their eyes and you can see them analysing and understanding things around them#smart birds will also challenge you quite a bit#you have to treat them with a lot of respect and consideration to get any back and once you do earn it its the most incredible feeling#and of all the falcons ive worked with eurasian kestrels are the smartest#i wont compare them visually because all birds are so so beautiful but kestrels generally are a joy to watch like hellooooo#so yes i love all raptors and all birds but ultimately kestrels <333333#harris hawks and desert eagle owls are very very close seconds but if I had to choose one then yeah!#ALSO shout out to vultures and eagles i adore them but i dont have much first hand experience (yet!) so they’re not talked abt much#birds
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My 10 wildlife/photography highlights of 2020 posts: Blog 2-Seeing some of my favourite birds this year-Part 1: A general look
As always in these thread of posts I shall now take a look back over times that stood out when seeing some of my 30 favourite birds this year. This highlights blog comes in two parts this year due to length, with part 1 tonight and part 2 tomorrow. This one a general look and the second part a detailed look into some favourite birds I saw very close to home at Lakeside and around the house whilst working from home in response to the pandemic. The number of favourite birds I have increased from 28 to 30 as I added two species that were previously on my B list of favourite birds the Short-eared Owl and Great White Egret. I saw 24 of the 30 this year which I was really happy with as with the pandemic etc. a lot of them it just didn’t look possible I’d see and for the other six it was either really rare/elusive ones or I just didn’t go anywhere where I could see one. I got off to a great start for favourite birds of mine in 2020 as I mentioned in my highlights blog yesterday over the opening days off I had of the year. Five of the year ticks I got on New Year’s Day were highlighted in red on my spreadsheet for my year list to denote they are favourite birds of mine, Great Crested Grebe a fitting first favourite bird of the year for me and not for the first time over Lakeside on the walk it would perhaps as I mention in tomorrow’s part of this post have the biggest role of all my favourite birds this year at Lakeside. I took the first picture in this photoset of one at Hayling Island in March. I then saw Buzzard and Little Egret on the way to Portland from the car on New Year’s Day on the motorway in Hampshire and as I said yesterday got spectacular Gannet and Short-eared Owl views there. The first three species were actually consecutive year ticks on my chronologically ordered list so this made it look distinctive on the list.
It was nice to tick off a good few more of my favourite birds at home on trips over the rest of those opening days, with the owls the last tick of mine on my highest ever New Year’s Day bird haul Brent Goose was the very next at Farlington Marshes on 2nd January, I also saw my first Shelducks of the year there. 3rd January just like New Year’s Day over Lakeside in 2019 was a woodpecker double as I saw my first Great Spotted Woodpecker of the year at Denny Wood in the New Forest and my first Green Woodpecker of 2020 on a quick sunny second Lakeside walk of the year that afternoon. On the way back from Denny Wood I saw my first this year of my other new favourite bird the Great White Egret in a field from the motorway at Broadlands. This year tick the one directly before Green Woodpecker so another double. Pochard and Jay were year ticks the next day at Blashford Lakes. I enjoyed some great times seeing these birds.
It has been a strong year for me for seeing Great Spotted Woodpeckers, I’ve seen many and its often been the bird to pop up when I’ve seen or photographed something else memorable to make it into a truly special day. Examples of when this has happened have been along the Titchfield Canal path on that classic day seeing Barn Owls, Fox and Roe Deers that I mentioned last night where I saw one fly over and at Blashford Lakes where I first fell for these birds on more than one occasion. I took the second picture in this photoset of one here on 1st March. It’s really reminded me why I adore this species with its striking appearance, sound and colours and the aura around it.
Back to the first days of the year and like last year on the way to Gloucestershire for Slimbridge for my birthday we stopped off at Red Kite stronghold Oxfordshire, having a look at some at Benson and like last year Watlington on the way there and back home. Especially on the way and particularly at Benson we enjoyed phenomenal views of this iconic and precious species. At Benson we saw dozens flying in the air at a time over a lane and some flew over very closely. Even though it was against grey skies it proved a perfect chance to test the flying shot ability I was unsure of on my new camera to begin this trip away. I took pictures I was so proud of including the third of mine in this photoset and most importantly enjoyed an exceptional wildlife experience with one of our greatest birds. It topped the same stop off last year. Red Kites continued to be more and more common at home building on last year where I noted this a lot as I saw some on the way to work from the train and during working days in Winchester quite often which was great, as well as a few at home which I talk about in part 2 of this highlights post tomorrow. I got a great view of a Red Kite flying low over our head at Noar Hill in mid-May which I took the fourth picture in this photoset of. At and on the way on the motorway to Fleet Pond I got great views of Red Kite and Buzzard on 27th September. At Slimbridge I took the fifth of one of the stars of the place a lovely Shelduck.
When back home and back to work in January attention of course turned to another of my favourite birds of prey the Peregrine Falcon, particularly Winnie and Chester the Winchester pair. I picked up where I left off in 2019 really what had been an amazing year for them seeing the adults and chicks so many times and taking so many photos on days I took my spare bridge camera to work with me. I got Peregrine as a year tick on 9th January with a view of one on the north tower at Winchester Cathedral. I then continued to monthly or twice monthly bring my bridge camera to work to try for pictures of these beautiful birds as they continued to fly between the cathedral and St. Thomas Church. In February I photographed both birds at both locations during the course of the month which felt fantastic, I took the sixth picture in this photoset during my February cathedral with-camera-visit. In April this picture and one I took of a hyacinth in the cathedral grounds taken in March both appeared in the Hampshire Chronicle newspaper in the camera club section a proud moment for me and this Peregrine picture appeared with an article they did on the family too. I got so many of my wildlife, landscape and minority subject pictures in the chronicle this year especially local ones whilst working at home which really stood out I loved putting my pictures on Facebook groups this year during lockdown and working from home. My photos of the Peregrines seemed to get better and better if I say so myself and I could just not get enough of seeing these birds. It sort of began to feel normal seeing them up until I had to work from home which brought other benefits a key theme in all of these highlights blogs but as I remarked when watching them at St. Thomas in February it sort of still feels surreal to be seeing this bird fairly close up at times and just so easily see one. I got stunning views of these birds regularly across this year again.
In February also it was ramping up towards their breeding season with the webcam being switched back on with a second camera this year too making their journey so accessible at more than one angle to all and by March eggs were laid. I found myself feeling the same feelings as last year when I first started to observe these birds around that time and I could look on the webcam before I left the office each lunch to see if they were about then go and see them. So it made me feel good in terms of my connections with these birds. When I was working from home due to the Coronavirus in late April I was thrilled to get little glimpses on the webcams on the cathedral website of the very little chicks as the eggs began hatching. Such an amazing moment. I was a lot more on the ball with reading updates this year than last of knowing when the chicks would hatch, hence I enjoyed seeing the eventual five chicks on the webcam in their early stages a lot more with great views of them being fed and things. As all five fledged successfully a big theme for me became watching them and Peregrine families from other local cities’ cathedrals a great thing to do whilst working from home which a lot of people did too in these isolating times. On 10th August I got a precious chance to go and watch the Peregrines again when I had to go into the office for a morning. My Mum dropped me off and picked me up at Winchester and during my lunch break I saw a noisy Peregrine fly over St. Thomas Church where I spoke at a safe social distance to a kind person about them, one flying at the cathedral and one adult on the Winchester Cathedral north ledge which looked fantastic in the sun of a summer’s day during a heatwave. It felt surreal being back seeing and photographing one with my bridge camera here after five months away whilst it was a one-off thing. Seeing them in the flesh and indeed just seeing Peregrines I didn’t see one on walks at any stages of the restrictions in between elsewhere I don’t think felt quite surreal. It did give me a valuable chance to connect with this bird once more, a chance to reminisce on my times with the families in previous years and the successful year for them this year again with the five chicks fledged unusual for the species I learned to fledge that many and it was bringing something I do so much whilst working in the office at lunch breaks at Winchester into what the days in my life were like at that time which was very different. A very warm and satisfying feeling being so in aw of them and watching one I could not take my eyes off it when there. I also got fantastic views of a Peregrine flying at Lymington-Keyhaven nature reserve again the Lymington end towards the start of the year where I had seen one on Christmas Day 2019 and I saw one there in October.
Winchester really confirmed itself as the raptor haven I’ve portrayed it as this year with one of my non-favourites Sparrowhawk a regular sighting for me here but also great Buzzard views often with quite a few in the sky at times. A great chance to enjoy a bird that’s been one of my favourites for a long time as I have at a lot of places this year. I enjoyed Buzzards immediately locally in lockdown a lot as I mention loads in my next highlights post. But on days we did other local walks in lockdown it was nice to appreciate different common members of my list of favourite birds and get excited to see and hear them a lot. Notable instances seeing Little Egrets and Red Kite flying over at the river Itchen, Bishopstoke, many Jays and a Great Spotted Woodpecker heard at Stoke Park Wood and another Jay and a few Buzzards flying over at Magdalen Hill after I’d seen two of the latter at home that morning also. Shelduck alongside favourite birds of mine I’d more regularly seen seeing during lockdown Great Crested Grebe and Little Egret was a delight to see at Lymington on 23rd May when we did our first trip there and to the sea in just over two months as I took pleasure and had a surreal feeling at seeing common species of that habitat which I hadn’t seen for months so this felt great. When at Pennington a couple of weeks later it was lovely to see Shelducks with adorable ducklings among many other baby birds that day as well as many Little Egrets and Great Crested Grebe. When back at Pennington in early September I very much enjoyed seeing older young Shelducks, Little Egrets with a few flying right by us which was nice and it was almost weird seeing Great Crested Grebes on the sea somewhere other than Lakeside with my journey with them there this year detailed in my next highlights post.
On a January day at the Lymington end of the Lymington-Keyhaven nature reserve I marvelled at Kingfishers again with some great views as they were a year tick that day for a third year running here. A memorable time again. I’ve also had such a good year for Brent Geese another speciality bird here with many seen and heard at different locations. One weekend that sticks in the mind is a February one where I saw lots and photographed some at Hayling Island on the Saturday and then I saw many more and photographed one at Pennington on the Sunday the seventh picture in this photoset. When seeing Brent Geese at Farlington Marshes in early October at the point in the reserve I had my first amazing experience as a boy with them when hundreds flew over my head noisily I reflected on why this made me fall in love with them. Farlington Marshes as I’ve said so often is one of if not the best place in the country for Brent Geese there are so many around in the season and it’s so good for them. I read a bit that day about how important the Brent Geese are to the local area as their presence has stopped a lot of development proposals in Portsmouth over the year including Portsmouth Football Club’s desire to leave their Fratton Park home to build a new stadium at a site at Farlington near to the marshes. Which we could have a huge debate about but there is no denying this is helping the environment. So it reminded me something I am passionate about just what a special place this reserve is and what a special bird this really is in Hampshire as a whole. That October afternoon was a special one for favourite birds of mine at Farlington with Shelduck seen well and lots and lots of Little Egrets, Great Crested and four Buzzards one on a light three flying together seen on the M27 on the journey there. It was also a memorable goose day as I enjoyed close views of the odd Barnacle and Snow Goose that goes to Farlington that I had seen before here and at Baffins Pond where they fly between really intimate views that day and I got pictures. On 31st October I enjoyed seeing lots of lovely Brent Geese at Lymington there in numbers by that point as well as Great Crested Grebes out to sea and great Little Egret views I took a photo of one of the latter.
On a daily exercising walk on 2nd May I made it a tenth spring in a row that I’ve heard a Cuckoo in since I saw my first in 2011 when I heard a faint one calling at Bentley Wood which was magical as always. Hearing one of these birds is almost as good as seeing one especially my first in a spring it’s that exciting and amazing it’s the sound of spring for me. I heard Cuckoos really well on a visit to Martin Down in mid-May when restrictions had lifted a little so we could go there it was nice pure belts of it to hear very clearly it does feel me with such joy hearing it. That day I got smashing Buzzard views too of one at the reserve, one flying along the lane as we exited and two closely on posts on the way back. When back in late July I got a brilliant view of a wet Buzzard on a rainy day on a pylon on the way home. The next day after that I got a nice view of a Buzzard flying over at Stockbridge Down. I was so happy to see my first Cuckoo of 2020 and make it my fourth consecutive year seeing them at stronghold for them Fritham in the New Forest where we were very lucky to see two and hear the call again throughout the walk on a nice sunny and hot second May bank holiday Sunday. What a top experience! The next day I heard another Cuckoo at Bentley Wood much more clearly the sound was than the last time here, it’s certainly different hearing them after seeing one there’s no pressure of I’ve heard it now I need to see it but it’s just amazing hearing them on their own as I’ve said before anyway. That day I also saw Jay and Buzzard flying through. I got a brilliant view of Buzzard on another visit here the following Saturday a paler looking one over the path against a blue sky. Cuckoo, Buzzard and Jay were stars of another Martin Down visit to close May, hearing the former and seeing Jay at the beginning of a hot and sunny walk. On that walk we got brilliant close Buzzard views flying against a bright blue sky so nice to feel spoiled by this coming so soon after similar at Lakeside again and again in weeks one particular Lakeside Buzzard moment from the spring I mention in part 2 of this blog tomorrow. On 13th September we got as we often do a nice view of a Buzzard on a telegraph pole on the way home from Martin Down. A place that September day when we walked around the reserve we also got some great moments watching Red Kites watching one mobbed by a Jackdaw a lot not a sight I’ve often seen so that was very intriguing to see on a great afternoon of birds.
On 13th June at Common Marsh I got a brief view and then cracking prolonged binocular views as it moved around the reeds of my first Sedge Warbler of the year. I took the eighth picture in this photoset of this bird. I really did see what a beautiful, well-marked and striking bird it is that day and it reminded me why I love it. A key moment in one of my best general and packed Saturdays this year where at Stockbridge Down where we went first we saw two Buzzards and Red Kite and Little Egret seen at Common Marsh as part of an impressive array of birds by the river. I had a quite honestly rare in years for me now second encounter with a Sedge Warbler on a scorching Saturday 8th August at Farlington Marshes getting a great view of one in and around the reedbeds. It felt amazing. I also saw a Buzzard sat on a post for our whole walk that day as well as Little Egret and Shelducks including young on a generally brilliant day of birdwatching with many other top species seen too. On 18th July whilst dog sitting I took Missy on a walk at Fleming Park in Eastleigh I’d not been for years over the old golf course. I knew from when we used to go there loads that it’s good for Green Woodpeckers and sure enough I got two great views of them on this walk really brilliant to see I enjoyed it on a generally great local Saturday of wildlife and photos for me so much seen and so many taken a very hot and sunny day a true part of summer, it was a brilliant welcome back to the old golf course area of the park for me. On 1st August at Emer Bog and Baddesley Common nature reserve it was great to hear a Buzzard calling closely a lot and see a Jay a memorable afternoon generally for me. I saw another Buzzard really well the next day at Magdalen Hill flying over my head which was fantastic not for the first time at this near to Winchester reserve this year with Kestrels seen well that day also as they often can be there.
On 16th August at Hayling Island oysterbeds we were treated to glorious views of two young Buzzards flying around and in trees. They looked so creamy and lovely in plumage. Their wingspans looked massive as they flew over it really was quite a sight to behold and I loved seeming them in the sunshine. Quite a moment. That day I also saw Great Crested Grebes out to sea and a Great Spotted Woodpecker during rain at Earnley Triangle on Hayling Island where we went first.
I had a great August bank holiday Sunday walk at Thursley Common in Surrey seeing a few Dartford Warblers near to the car park in an area here we never had before possibly relocated from the area we see loads behind the lakes on the heath that had been badly burnt by the heath fire in the spring so this was encouraging and great. That day on a day Hobby and Kestrel views starred too I liked seeing a Red Kite an ever present here on our visits and the area generally in a glorious weekend of raptors with five species seen and a woodpecker double with great particularly flying views of Green and Great Spotted making out their lovely markings I heard the or a green nicely too. I saw another Dartford Warbler very well at Ashley Walk in the New Forest on 17th October on a generally brilliant afternoon I wrote more about that in my third of these posts going out next Thursday about my visits to the New Forest this year I saw a Buzzard well that day too.
I wrote about experiences with more of and some I’ve mentioned here and part 2 of this blog already my favourite birds a lot in my fifth of these posts about my week off in June, when I saw my first Dartford Warbler of the year at Arne and another at Thursley Common, my first Guillemot, Razorbill and Fulmar of the year at Durlston and then again at Portland the next I took the ninth picture in this photoset of a Fulmar from the cliff flying that day and my first Osprey of 2020 at Fishlake Meadows. In my seventh of these posts about my autumn some get a mention. In my eighth of these posts about visiting Devon and Cornwall for a weekend in August I wrote about seeing my first Dipper of the year at Fingle Bridge and first Choughs of the year at Cape Cornwall and Botallack, and some favourite birds of mine get a mention in my ninth of these posts about our week in Norfolk too where at the nature reserve Sculthorpe Moor I took the tenth and final picture in this photoset of a Kingfisher. In my bonus eleventh highlights post this year about my November and December I also wrote about favourite birds of mine.
#favourite#birds#favourite birds#fulmar#kingfisher#osprey#brent goose#shelduck#pochard#guillemot#razorbill#world#gannet#great spotted woodpecker#green woodpecker#jay#chouch#buzzard#peregrine falcon#red kite#short-eared owl#brent geese#dipper#little egret#great white egret#great crested grebe#cuckoo#sedge warbler#dartford warbler#beautiful
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——— basics! ♡
NAME: The H, or HelenE
PRONOUNS: She/her
ZODIAC SIGN: Aquarius
TAKEN OR SINGLE: Single
TIME ZONE: Well, right now it’s UTC+4, usually it’s GMT, but this academic year it’ll be CEST for my year abroad.
——— three facts! ♡
My favourite dinosaurs are tyrannosaurus, utahraptor, dakotaraptor, velociraptor, spinosaurus and therizinosaurus. If you can’t tell, I really like therapods and especially adore the dromaeosaur (raptor) family. One of my big obsessions is dinosaurs; one of my preferred genres of writing is palaeofiction (very niche, I know), I dream about them (I’ve even dreamt about BEING a dinosaur... multiple times) (and yes, I’ve dreamt a dinosaur Sephiroth and you can find a doodle of him on this blog...).
Speaking of my passions, my main three special interests are dinosaurs, veganism/animal rights, and funnily enough, Sephiroth himself. I’m also a big film connoisseur (my favourite genres are science fiction and horror; I despise comedy and most romance so my knowledge on those types of films is borderline non-existent), and I adore animation. I’ve also had special interests in space, various groups of animals (and animals in general) (apart from non-avian dinosaurs, I’ve had a dog phase which makes me cringe, and an avian dinosaur phase, AKA modern birds, and also one on Phorusrhacids (giant, flightless, extinct carnivorous birds), anime/manga, different pieces of fiction (funnily enough, this includes my least favourite piece of fiction ever conceived, I hated it so much I grew fascinated by it, and began to love it in a ‘you’re so terrible that I’m actively inspired by your terrible-ness’ way), and probably a bunch more I’ve neglected to mention. You don’t choose the special interest... the special interest chooses you.
General tropes you’ll find in my writing includes extreme violence, tragic or bittersweet endings, characters who are ‘different’ in some way (or misunderstood), anti anthropocentrism, trauma, corruption, moral greyness (sometimes of a very dark shade), and most likely, a LOT of death. No, I do not write light stories, and yes, I’ve had people tell me my work has made them cry. Granted, said works are old now and I hate them, so I’m hoping my current project will have similar effect.
——— experience ! ♡
I first started RPing in 2019 with a character named Ghost; it was a wattpad RP about a war between fire and ice dragons. Ghost was a pacifist ice dragon, and she ended up being the focus of my first tumblr RP blog (summer 2020, I adapted her into the FF7 universe... the blog’s pretty much inactive now, but it was a multi-muse with other OCs adapted into the FF7 universe from previous wattpad RPs, like Athena, Andromeda and Blade).
With regards to Sephiroth, I began to RP him a month or two after I made Ghost’s blog (again, summer 2020). I’d never really written a canon character, like ever, but I wanted to give it a go because a) I really like Sephiroth, b) I find him very relatable to a personal degree, and c) because of those two reasons, I felt I might be able to write him decently. It was a sideblog, but in February 2021 I made him my main muse with a blog of his own, since I was much more active with him.
General writing-wise, I think I started writing stories around when I was 7, and I haven’t stopped since.
——— muse preference ! ♡
SEPHIROTH. My other blogs (the OC multimuse, Hojo, and JENOVA) are all inactive now. Sometimes I have moments where I want to write Ghost again (she’s my favourite OC if you can’t tell), and maybe I could make a sideblog for her sometime, but my focus is definitely on Sephiroth.
——— FLUFF / ANGST / SMUT! ♡
FLUFF: You know, usually I’m not big on soft/happy stuff, but sometimes it’s good to write considering most of my stuff is DEATH, BLOOD, and PAIN. Especially since Sephiroth is a character who’s committed acts of extreme violence, and hides a lot of his true vulnerability, I think it can be interesting to explore said vulnerability with nicer, more calm situations. I don’t write much fluff, but I kinda wish I did a bit more.
ANGST: ... Well duh. DUH. Though, it’s more Sephiroth causing angst for other characters, but he’s still very much filled with pain considering what he’s been through. Sometimes this can slip through when he thinks back on his conception, or if he’s interacting with a character like Lucrecia, Hojo, or Vincent. One of my favourite drabbles to write was this one, where he faces permadeath and must come to terms with the fact that he will face his biggest fear of all: oblivion (hence the title). So yes, I like angst.
SMUT: nOPE. I don’t mind writing something suggestive, especially if it’s paired with my familiar old friend violence, but I can’t bring myself to write explicit smut.
PLOT / MEMES: I can honestly go either way.
Tagged By: @snow-dxnce (thank you! Unfortunately now... all must deal with the consequences of my essay-length writing... MWAHAHHAHAH)
Tagging: Whoever wants to do it, do it. I’m almost ashamed to tag anyone specific because I turned this little thing into an absolute monster.
#tag game#mun#how to make everyone on tumblr think you're crazy 101#whoopsie daisy#0 self control innit
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13/04/2021-Red Kite, first ducklings of the year and other spring scenes at Lakeside and memorable evening sky
I took the first picture in this photoset of the view from my room as I worked earlier. I loved getting a cracking view of a Red Kite or the Red Kite as there seems to be one around a lot in the spring time so its very likely the same one flying through the scene visible from my room, getting mobbed as it went. It was spectacular and really pleased me to see it and make out its famous features so well. It flew a lot lower than it might normally, although there was that special moment one of my moments of the year in mid-March when I stepped out the door for my walk just as one whizzed right over my head, and lower than the Buzzards also a regular pair of birds I think which I saw yesterday. A great week for raptors and birds generally out the window as I’ve worked this week, which alongside the light and some darker green shades all around I think is really contributing to me feeling a lot like I did a year ago during the start of my working from home days when I think I did take a lot of optimism even in the most difficult of times for everyone when it was great to really notice everything around me in nature and focus so much so its a time I interestingly look back fondly on. I didn’t know I was going to get this welcome nostalgia triggered by the simply look of the landscape, wildlife seen and generally what I am seeing and photographing.
I took the second, third and fourth pictures in this photoset of views including a tree in blossom and a tree further on in its journey really green going down the northern path. I loved taking in that delicious mostly light but sometimes dark green scenery which I love of a spring glowing in the sunshine yet again.
Coming into this year with the focus of me coming to Lakeside every day I had come to appreciate the beauty in the bare branches, especially with raindrops glistening in the sun resting on them. Then the catkins turned everything a nice maybe more faint green. Then the mostly white but some pink blossom set the landscape ablaze with colour. And now the green is starting to carpet the landscape and it will only get greener from here on in. I have adored taking in this stunning scenery as spring emerged bit by bit and having that focus of coming every day to be able to notice it gradually coming and I have found it so powerful. I found out on Twitter earlier that it is international plant appreciation day so it was good to enjoy these trees on this day.
I had a brief look at the westernmost lake where I was delighted to spot something else that helped make my spring and early working from home days last year when I was thrilled to spot with a female Mallard two adorable ducklings swimming behind it in the middle of the lake. I took the fifth picture in this photoset with my big lens stretching a little to get the shot, then they swam to the western side of the lake and I managed to get along here and was thrilled to see them a bit more closely. I took the sixth picture in this photoset of them here, and it marked not only my first ducklings of the year which is very exciting but its my first young birds seen this year all together which is a smashing part of spring and something I am so thrilled about. It really did make me happy seeing these Mallards, and a Mallard flew nicely over as I got to the shore of the lake and also as I walked through the estate getting back home some were flying over too which was interesting. I got a glimpse of the Great Crested Grebe on the nest beside the path on this lake too it still seems to be going well for them. I also got another top view and it was brilliant to hear it so clearly of a Blackcap down the northern path on the way back. I took the seventh picture in this photoset of a scene dominated by blossom on the way out of Lakeside after another lovely lunch time walk there.
It was a brilliant showing for the sky as the sun went down this evening I saw some brilliant pre-sunset skies and enjoyed taking a few pictures of the interesting scenes including the final three pictures in this photoset. The last one I took from the middle level of the house where I don’t usually take them as its usually my room on the top level where you can get a greater view over everything. So it was good that I was able to see the sun shining down nicely from the middle too.
Wildlife Sightings Summary: One of my favourite birds the Great Crested Grebe, Mallard, Coot, Canada Goose, Greylag Goose, Black-headed Gull, Starling, House Sparrow, Feral Pigeon, Woodpigeon, Jackdaw, Blackbird and Blackcap.
#wildlife#wildlife sightings summary#uk#england#photography#hampshire#world#beautiful#birdwatching#birds#spring#duckling#ducklings#mallard#mallards#happy#photos#sun#sunny#green#blossom#blackcap#grebe#great crested grebe#coot#greylag goose#canada goose#black-headed gull#jackdaw#blackbird
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