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Showing posts with label Ruff. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ruff. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 May 2019

Best Of The Rest

A round up of a few other images that didn't make a post in it's own right, like the mating Black-winged Stilt were no more than grab shots before it was all over, or, just that it was too few photo ops on the day....hey ho !


Red-knobbed Coot

Image of a Red-knobbed Coot was about the only images I managed at San Felipe being surprisingly quite, also as the water levels were so high lacking the usual mud edges all the waders were occupying the nearby flooded fields, some day's are just like that !


Black-winged Stilt

Three images of mating Black-winged Stilts, unfortunately it was around midday by which time the sun was out big style and the light was way to harsh.





Ruff

Image of a very confiding Ruff taken at 3-4 meters distance, at one point it got to close. I've managed to get the sun somewhere behind me with this shot hence the colour looks pretty good.





Crested Lark

Taken early morning around 8.0 am as you can probably tell on a drive around Lo Romero Golf, at the time I was trying to get images of a Southern Grey Shrike I had seen the day before, then I found a Woodchat Shrike never managing to get images of either. This Lark just popped up on a stump...lucky to get an image of something !





Little Owl

On my drive I usually come across this chap at the less developed far end of the coarse but getting near can sometimes be difficult, other times will just site on a rock or wall as in this case...get out of the car and he's or she is off





Sunday, 30 September 2018

Murcia Tidy Up

Post Trip Tidy Up - 30.9.19


Although return bird migration didn't match my expectation being very quiet, perhaps my visit was early or, possibly late I don't know but it's alway good to travel the Murcia and enjoy the usually fine weather.

I'm still going through the hundreds of images from the trip and any wothwhile images not included in earlier posts I will include here, but in the interim here's an image of a Little Stint which are pretty common on the salinas.

Little Stint

The story behind the stint images...the wader was feeding in some very sticky mud, the only way the bird could free its legs was too flap it's wings to lift itself out of the mud, it could then move and carry on feeding.

Click image to view....





Dunlin - summer plumage







Ruff - something in the eye I believe ?





Wednesday, 19 September 2018

It's A Ruff In The Sun

Salinas de San Pedro - 19.9.18


Some times when its quite you need just to sit and wait as you never know what might turn up, of course a bit of luck also helps. It's one of those days

I'm well into the morning session with not much to show for my efforts, I'm sat behind the car at the second pull when a Ruff pops up on the lagoon bank, it looks at me wondering what my intensions are....I freeze. I already have the camera and tripod next to me and slowly I mount the "big white" the shot looks good and uncluttered shooting across the salinas.

The Ruff looks like it wants to make it's way to the nearby lagoon but it's unsure, it remains on the bank for what seems like an age but in reality must be no more than 45 seconds, I shoot maybe sixty images in various poses and then it fly's and its gone.

This was one of those opertunistic lucky occasions that sometimes present itself, being in the right place at the right time, I'm please with the images.

Ruff





Tuesday, 24 April 2018

Wind Swept Waders

24th April - Salinas de San Pedro


Fantastic wader session down at the salinas San Pedro this morning which is mainly a result of the strong winds over the last couple of days with a fair few waders gathered in my favourite location.

Parking up I have a quick scan of whats about before I decide to set up, nothing particularly new but quite a number of waders along the waters edge, the light is good and I'm looking forward to spending a couple or three hours at this location which I prefer rather than a long walk around the salt pans.

Although it's been blue sky's and twenty fives degrees the strong northerly winds has resulted a large number of waders congregating in a small bay at one end of the salinas, with the aid of some camo to impersonate some of the shrubbery I've managed get really close to the action with some birds quite happy to approach as close as two meters, way to close for the "big white".

The images are just some of the many hundred taken over the last two mornings which include….male and female Kentish and Little Ringed Plover, Common and Curlew Sandpiper some in summer plumage, Ruff including a fantastic black male, Redshank, Oystercatcher briefly which I missed, Sanderling in various plumage states, Black Winged Stilt and Avocet. Also present was a group of photogenic Slender Bill Gulls and several paired up Shelduck and all within a twenty metre range !

A group of about twenty Sanderling always the easiest to get near, some in full summer plumage are scuttling clockwork like along the waters edge chased back and forth by the lapping waves.

Click image to view

Resting Sanderling



Sanderling - carrying out maintenance




A little further away in to deeper water are five Curlew Sandpiper feeding, one with some damaged tailed feathers and three showing the red of advanced summer plumage, the colour of the water seems to have be co-ordinated with the birds plumage.

Curlew Sandpiper - almost full Summer Plumage




Occasionally a Common Sandpiper will call an alarm and the waders disappear across the salinas only soon to return, in the interim a group of Slender Bill Gulls always make an alternative for some good images.

Slender Billed Gull



On previous occasions I've visited the San Pedro salinas I've rarely managed to get close to Common Sandpiper, normally all I've managed is a call and a backend view of the wader as it disappears across the salinas.

This wader came very close giving some good photo opertunites.

Common Sandpiper


Common Sandpiper

Alarm call, there goes all the waders disappearing into the distance....again !


Black Winged Stilts are present in numbers through out the year on the salinas, rather than the usual image pose of a standing wader I though these images in the strong wind would be more interesting.

Black Winged Stilt




There are three Ruff present but way over on the other side of the bay, brown, brown with a white neck and this all black Ruff complete with neck ruff, unfortunately this black wader was constantly chased off by the other Ruff never coming close.

This is one of several images of the wader carrying out some plumage maintenance which would have been superb if it was a little closer.

Ruff - Part Summer Plumage



Turnstones are busy further up on the high tide line doing what they do occasionally venturing into the water, these waders were easily spooked by the alarm call of the Common Sandpiper.

Turnstone



Other waders present were a resident pair of breeding Kentish Plovers, a Little Ringed Plover that's been around for some days and several Redshank, I have posted images of these waders previously so are not included in this post.

One wader that is new for me at San Pedro is the Oystercatcher, it was only after I stopped looking through the camera that I notice the wader flying away from the bay....a missed opportunity !