And so - briefly - to the old patch.
Today I paid my respects to the Glossy Ibis that's made Seaton Marshes its home. Long range + no light + elderly camera = a bit of a mess...
Although it's been around for a month or so, this was my first visit. "Hello" I said. |
Previous Glossy Ibis encounters on the Axe...
September 2009 - 6 birds which made us all hurry very much |
Early one morning in September 2010, and 18 of a flock of 21 from Sidmouth fly distantly past Bun and me at Beer Head |
In addition to the above there was another bird quite recently (last year?) which turned up when I was phasing. It was a one day job I think...though I don't actually know because I didn't see it and didn't care. Also, the bird in the top photo came with a friend initially. Finally, there was a bird in the 1940s which spent a few months around the valley. So, if you were dead jammy and really old you could have seen 28 Glossy Ibises on the Axe. Mind you, in 2009 I expect you'd have been really hacked off that your 60-year blocker had just fallen...
Anyway, enough about that dump the Axe, let's talk about photo quality. Looking at those above I have to say that a lot of my pics are really quite awful. On most blogs I notice that photo quality gradually gets better as time passes and new gear is purchased. Well, here on NQS the 'time passing' part is definitely happening, but the 'new gear purchasing' part, not so much. Suffer on, dear readers.
Photographic excellence is so passé Gav...
ReplyDeleteThank goodness for that!
DeleteI've seen 27 of them! The 1940's was a bit before my time...
ReplyDeleteHa ha! I should have done my research before writing this post - it wasn't the 1940s, it was 1964, from Nov 21 to Dec 19 according to 'The Birds of Devon'. So even I was old enough to twitch that one...assuming I could have persuaded my mum to take me out of infants and accompany me 200 miles on the train from Essex! Actually, thinking about it I wasn't really on the grapevine when I was five...
DeleteI'm sure there must be one or two Devon birders around who saw that one.