Showing posts with label 25-60x. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 25-60x. Show all posts

Tuesday, 6 September 2016

My bird of the year

Untitled
Pegsdon Hills from the top
 
I hadn't visted Pegsdon Hills for a good few months since Saturday. It is one of my favourite places to go birding in autumn in Beds - it just has that air of something good always just around the corner. Over the years I've never found anything really special on the hills - the best I've managed have been a few Pied Flies, Merlin, and a Goshawk but nothing that really gets the heart pumping. In early September I'm really just looking for a Redstart or perhaps another Pied Fly, and half-expecting a Tree Pipit to fly over - its that sort of place.

So on Saturday morning I did my usual circuit - get up early and go straight to the few bushes around the trig point. I always start here as it often gets disturbed soon after dawn and I don't think the few bushes really hold birds very long. If you are lucky you may get a Whinchat or Tree Pipit on the fenceline below, or, more usually, some Wheatears on the south side where the rabbit warren is - and that's all I got on this morning - five Wheatears chasing each other around. They are always nice to see, so I spent a little while getting some digiscoped shots of one of them. I eventually tear my self away to have another quick look around the trig point bushes again - still quiet - so I amble westwards towards the middle valleys.
Wheatear, Pegsdon Hills, 3rc Sept 2016

Wheatear, Pegsdon Hills, 3rc Sept 2016
Wheatear, Pegsdon Hills, 3rc Sept 2016
One of the five Wheatears near the trig point

The bushes were very quiet as I pass the terraces and the incessant mewing of a juvenile Common Buzzard came from the woodland in the middle of the site. A few Yellow Wags had gone over but precious little else - I'd not even seen a Red Kite so far this morning.

I began to wander down to the bottom of the hill, I could hear a few Chiffchaffs and Blackcaps on the opposite side of the valley I was on - a Whitethroat called too. I could see Andy Grimsey looking through the same mixed flock from the other side so I decided to head down to meet him.

We met in the bottom of the valley and stood looking up at the thick Elder bushes oppsite. They held a lot of birds - but mostly Blackcaps, Chiffchaffs, Long-tailed Tits and Blue Tits. We kept looking through the flock just in case it held something more exciting. After a while I noticed a Red Kite off to the left. What appeared to be a Common Buzzard was with it. I casually glanced at the birds through my bins, not really expecting to see anything out of the ordinary. The buzzard looked unusually dark. I quickly swapped to my scope. This was interesting. A very dark plumaged Buzzard, but with a stonkingly yellow cere! It had to be a Honey Buzzard! I made my conclusion know to Andy who was already watching the bird through his bins.

The views were great - no, better than great - outstanding for a Honey Buzzard! It was just a hundred meters away circling with the kite, in brilliant sunshine. Time to get the camera out. Both Andy and I began to fumble around for our cameras - Andy with his bridge camera, and I with my digiscoping kit. As luck would have it it headed our way and circled by itself just to the north of our position, before going in active flight off to our east and way past the trees - fan-bloody-tastic! I even had a little leap for joy.

Honey Buzzard, Pegsdon Hills, 3rd Sept 2016
Honey Buzzard, Pegsdon Hills, 3rd Sept 2016
Crippling Honey Buzzard views - real bird porn!
I even managed some video!

Saturday, 14 May 2016

Success!

Black Tern, Derek Whites Eggs pit, 14th May 2016

Black Tern, Derek Whites Eggs pit, 14th May 2016

Black Tern, Derek Whites Eggs pit, 14th May 2016
I popped in to check the terns on Derek's tonight and was delighted to find two of these dudes on the pit - Black Terns.  Until today I'd struggled to get flight shots with my GX7, but a spark last night meant that I decided to ignore the EVF and use a magnified viewer over my screen instead.  It seemed to do the trick - several decent keepers amongst the few hundred shots I took - a better rate than simply using the EVF.

Digiscoped with a Panasonic GX7, 20mm f1.7, Kowa 883, 25-60x.

Monday, 18 April 2016

Cetti's in the open!

Cetti's Warbler, Broom GP, 18th April 2016
This was so good I just had to write a post about it!  A Cetti's Warbler - digiscoped!  Broom's first Cetti's was only last october and now we currently have two birds singing around the site.  This was the first time I've really seen either of them well.  I just couldn't believe my luck when this bird paused in a flowering blackthorn just a few meters from me.  I had just enough time to rattle off about ten shots before it scuttled away again - this is about the best shot I managed.  Brilliant!

Panasonic GX7, 20mm f1.7 lens, Kowa 884, 25-60x eyepiece.

Thursday, 18 February 2016

First shots with the Kowa 1.6 extender

Below are just a few of the images I've got recently using the new Kowa 1.6 extender on my Kowa 883 'scope and 25-60x eyepiece.  The quality of the new extender is impressive and very sharp.  More to follow...

Greenfinch, The Lodge RSPB, 7th February 2016

Chaffinch, The Lodge RSPB, 7th February 2016

Greenfinch, The Lodge RSPB, 7th Feb 2016

Robin, The Lodge RSPB, 7th Feb 2016

Siskin, The Lodge RSPB, 7th February 2016

Brambling, The Lodge RSPB, 7th February 2016

Saturday, 7 November 2015

Penduline Tits

Penduline Tits

Penduline Tits

Penduline Tits

Penduline Tits

Penduline Tits

Penduline Tits

Sorry for not letting everybody know about these birds at Broom.  They were in a part we probably shouldn't have been on and which just wouldn't have coped with more than a trickle of birders.  Isn't it lucky we had that obliging bird at Priory CP late last year!  It's just a shame one certain birder has thrown his toys out of the pram for not knowing the instant these birds were found.  Can you guess who it is?

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