Saturday 7 October 2017

As easily as it comes...

...it vanishes. The muse, the desire, the inspiration...whatever you want to call them or it has left me. I have no drive at the moment to pick up my camera and shoot - anything.

September has been an endless month of below average weather and really below average photographic opportunities. Let's hope it returns soon. Usually I shoot between 2 and 3,000 images per month; in September I shot 147... that's it...147. Pitiful. If anyone out there has found my mojo let me know where it is.

So, what of those 147 images? what did I manage to record?




Snowberry





Bush-cricket





Autumn leaves






Garden orb-spider







Thorn apple





And that... is that... I did do a commercial shoot for a local school but those pictures cannot be posted on line...

So a really dull September guys... apologies an all, but September has washed me out. I hope this isn't the last Blog, but if it is, then thanks for looking over the past 5 years or so...

TTFN


Alex

Sunday 3 September 2017

Of mists...

...and mellow fruitfulness. Yep, autumn is just about upon us and John Keats tells us what to expect. Where are the days of spring? Aye where are they now?

Think not of them, thou hast thy music too -
While barred clouds bloom the soft-dying day,
And touch the stubble-plains with rosy hue;
Then in a wailful choir the small gnats mourn
Among the river sallows, borne aloft
Or sinking as the light wind lives or dies;
And full-grown lambs loud bleat from hilly bourn;
Hedge-crickets sing; and now with treble soft
The red-breast whistles from a garden-croft;
And gathering swallows twitter in the skies.


So, photographically how has August been? Well not to different to July really but some cool species have been found and some landscapes produced of which I am proud.





Agrimony





Broad-leaved helleborine




Common cudweed




Eyebright




Hare's-foot clover




Kidney vetch




First of my life ticks...maiden pink







Second life tick - Spanish catchfly







Spiked speedwell




Vervain

A delightful first part of the day and some lovely species. Thanks to the warden at Weeting Heath NNR for showing me maiden pink, I am just blown away by the colour.

After the successful first part of the day, I went to the Devil's Dyke near Newmarket...





The gorgeous chalk-hill blue butterfly - again the colour is just beautiful. However, they do have some not so attractive habits. Below are several feeding on dog faeces... a trait shared by many butterfly species.






Not forgetting places closer to home, I looked around my garden and the neighbouring orchard and found...




Migrant hawker, resting just outside the back door.





Parasol toadstools, trooping in the orchard...

And then a trip to the Fen...



Bankside vegetation - purple loosestrife and sneezewort amongst others...





Branched bur-reed





Creeping thistle





Juvenile blackbird






Sedge warbler





Autumn dew on spider's web





Trifid bur-marigold




Wild Angelica

Again, a good trip with some lovely early morning light and some equally lovely, fenland species.

Lucy and Quinn made yet another trip out to the continent this summer - another in their art trips around the major European cities. This time their destination was Madrid...

Three of my favourite images from Lucy's little Fuji (processed by yours truly)




Toledo... just look at that sky




Quinn... an art historian in the making.




The final trip this month was out to the coast - Snettisham to be exact for a walk on the beach. I managed to find some cool plants - bonus...




Carline thistle




Shingle ridge habitat




Snettisham beach




Yellow-horned poppy - Image of the month...





Corizus hyoscyami




Sea aster




Sea campion



Sea spurge


Sales from the agency I supply have increased this month - which is always a winner, so if you are ever in the market for any images then look no further than here... and have a look at what I have for sale. 
a summer of unfulfilled promise; of a hot start that didn't really come to anything; of planned shoots that didn't happen due to rain; of dragonfly populations cut short by voracious sparrows; a trip to the Brecks resulted in new plants seen and photographed, yet something was missing...something wasn't right. Not sure what though.  On a personal level it has also been an interesting Summer - old returned friends continue to delight, old estranged friends continue to drift away, new friends continue to entertain and frustrate in equal measure. I have also started to play golf again after a break of about 9 years. A sport I played from 9-17 before I gave up to play cricket; started again when I was 40 only to stop again when I was 42. I can't think of a better way to spend a day...So, photographically how has August been? Well not to different to July really but some cool species have been found and some landscapes produced of which I am proud.I hope you all have a great month and I wish you all love and peace in all you do. What the world needs now is love sweet love, it's the only thing there is just too little of... don't forget.TTFN





Saturday 5 August 2017

The beginning of the end...

July came to an end and as far as I'm concerned it can go without my blessing. The last two and a half weeks have been pretty awful as far as a photographer of the natural world is concerned... chilly, strong winds, rain, clouds...dull. Just occasionally there has been a bright day...just occasionally. I'm hoping August will be kinder, but it hasn't started too promisingly.

The month started with my son's 9th birthday (9!!!, how did that happen?) - a day out to Blenheim Palace was his treat - some interesting photo opportunities...



















A few days after this I photographed a school prom - sixteen year olds in suits and ball gowns dancing, laughing, joking and relaxing after exams... you know the kind of thing. I won't publish images as I don't have permission from the children, but it was an enjoyable evening...

I have managed to get out on the fen every so often; on one day I found one of our most spectacular insects... Volucella zonania - the hornet mimic hoverfly. Completely harmless and stunning...








In between showers I found a small area of waste ground in my home village - these can be dull but conversely can be the only refuge for wildlife in an area. I recommend you seek out waste ground in your cities, towns and villages and see what you can find... I found this...





Salsify (Tragapogon porrifolius) - uncommon...and rather delightful...




A bright sunny day (another rarity) on a weekend gave me the chance to explore the fen for a good number of hours...and I wasn't disappointed:





Arrowhead (Sagittaria sagittifolia)





Flowering-rush (Butomus umbellatus)





This extraordinary plant is greater dodder (Cuscuta europaea) - it is a parasite, primarily on stinging nettles, which doesn't explain why it is rare...but it is. I've long wanted to see this plant, and finding my own really made my day. It reminds me of the red-weed in H.G. Wells' War of the Worlds.











Southern hawker (Aeshna cyanea) at rest on a grass stem. My picture of the month...

A trip on a showery day to a nature reserve near Peterborough proved to be disappointing and excellent at the same time (if that is possible)... With my good friend Nick (an excellent field naturalist) we went in search of crested cow-wheat (a rare species of woodland edges on calcareous soils, restricted in distribution to Eastern England here in the UK). This site is a know location for it and a mutual friend had seen it there last year. Unfortunately we failed to find it... maybe too early or just not observant enough... but we failed...dipped! However, we did find...





Latticed heath (Chiasmia clathrata clathrata) - day flying moth nectaring on wild thyme.





Pyramidal orchid (Anacamptis pyramidalis)




Silver-washed fritillary (Argynnis paphia)... so not a bad day after all...

Our final trip out this month was too the Norfolk coast...and the weather really did us proud; typical of the month...




And finally...the last hurrah for July...I wandered out into the garden and happened across this gorgeous beast, curled up in the sun...





Grass snake (Natrix natrix) - just beautiful; the cloudy eye would indicate that the animal is about to slough the skin. I hope I find it...






Nikon turned 100 this month... HAPPY BIRTHDAY NIKON... my favourite brand of camera...

And that about wraps it up for July... I hope to see you all in August... keep the passion.

Love and peace to you all

A.