Categories
David

Feeding birds — Slow motion video

Robins, house sparrows and a blue tit feeding at a window bird feeding tray. An experiment in slow motion video. Set to show at one quarter speed. Uploaded without a sound track.

An experiment in slow motion. The video was not filmed on a slo-mo setting, just edited as such after the event when it was suggested to me that this might show more detail. It does.

Categories
David

Woodpecker high in tree, Bantock

Woodpecker high in tree, Bantock

A great spotted woodpecker high in a tree on the edge of Bantock Park. Hard to spot among the maze of branches – the camera also struggled to focus on the bird rather than one or another of the branches. It’s just possible to make out the red patch on the bird’s throat in at least one picture; a mark that it was a male.

Categories
David

Still on tree, ginkgo fruit

Still on tree, ginkgo fruit

A ginkgo tree by the side of Compton Road, a lone female tree in the middle of a line of male ones. Regularly in autumn, the tree has a lot of fruit. Although many fall on the pavement, there’s still plenty on the tree as we head towards spring.

Categories
David

Redwings on ground, Bantock Park

Redwings on ground, Bantock Park

Five minutes or so after the redwings had retreated to the refuge of the trees (see yesterday’s post), two or three of the boldest decided it was safe enough to come back down and resume the search for food.

Categories
David

Growing in mortar on garden wall

Growing in mortar on garden wall

This little plant was an inch or so high. It was growing from the mortar between two of the stones on the top of a front garden wall.

Categories
David

Redwings on branches, Bantock Park

Redwings on branches, Bantock Park

Redwings in Bantock Park. They had taken refuge in trees when a man with a dog came a little too close to where they were feeding on the ground (see yesterday’s mistle thrush post).

When they had been on the ground, it was really obvious that the mistle thrush was a lot bigger than the redwings. his size contrast was magnified when they had flown onto branches: the redwings were it trees farther from where I was standing.  They were also closely surrounded by a maze of twigs, harder to spot than the bigger bird which was against a background of the open sky.