I am creating a pattern of starting posts with apologies and this one also starts with an apology. I am sorry, there is only a single picture of a bird below. I set out to meet a friend at the Stony Creek Nature Reserve to photograph birds and wildlife there but snow fell around Canberra on Saturday, 22 August and was still lying on the Brindabella Ranges the next day. As I was driving the 25 minutes to the nature reserve, and I was only about five minutes drive from my house, I looked out and saw the scene in the photograph at the top of the post. There is no doubt that I love bird and wildlife photography but I cannot ignore scenery like that when the sky makes it even moodier thanks to the dawn’s red glow and brooding clouds. I had to pull over to take some photographs. Coincidentally, while I was photographing, my friend phoned to say that he may be late or may not be able to get to the reserve as he was also photographing what he was seeing. We agreed that sometimes, when photographing, you just have to go with what is presented to you. Eventually, we did meet up, but on the road to the reserve where we both had pulled over to take more photographs. I stopped a couple more times on the way to the reserve. I also bumped into a nice guy who, like us, was out photographing the scenery. My friend and I eventually got to the nature reserve but it was then that a large cloud blocked out the sun. While was saw a number of birds the light was not bright enough to get good shots, so I only took one, possibly half-reasonable, shot of a Crimson Rosella. I was not disappointed with the morning because I really enjoyed the scenery and I thought that Stony Creek Nature Reserve was definitely worth another visit. Later that morning, I took my camera out to the yard, while I was supposed to be gardening, to take some shots around the garden. To cap off this very different photographic journey to the one I had envisioned, I had found a wombat skull in my touring around on Sunday and spent a couple of nights during the week trying to come up with the best way to photograph it. All in all, those change of plans on Sunday turned out for the best and I had a lot of fun. I will be back to photographing birds again but I do consider myself to be a nature photographer as well, so it was exhilarating to expand my photo collection that day with some different shots to those that I usually take. I hope you enjoy the photographs below.
Read MoreMy photo featured as the temporary banner on 'The beauty of Australian Nature' Flickr group
Very happy that one of my photos was chosen by Merrillie Redden to be the temporary banner for the awesome Flickr group, The beauty of Australian Nature. The first time one of my images has ever been a banner image on any Flickr group. Made my day on a wet Canberra Saturday. Please visit the Flickr group to see all the wonderful photos there. And many thanks to Merrillie for selecting my photo.
Video - An introduction to the natural history of Parsley Bay (the first video I have made)
Parsley Bay is a wonderful little inlet that I loved visiting as a child. Over Christmas 2019 I was in Sydney so early on the morning of Boxing Day, 26 December, I went for a snorkel in the bay. On a whim, I took my GoPro5 with the idea that I may want to film while I was snorkelling so I could make a movie later on. This video was my first attempt at making a movie and I really enjoyed the experience. Somewhat ironically, given the focus of this website, the film was not about birds nor about Canberra. With any luck, the next video will be in line with the content of this site. I hope you like the video I have posted at YouTube. I have pasted the description below.
Practicing macro photographing with spiders and insects - Photographing at home on Friday, 26 July 2019
Macro photography is an area of photography that fascinates me. I really like being able to show smaller creatures in large scale so as to portray the complexities of their bodies. To undertake this work properly, I think it is a photographic technique where having the right equipment is essential. To do macro photography properly a 1:1 lens is required, so as to really show the details of the small animals. Fortunately, I recently upgraded to the Canon EF100mm f2.8L Macro IS USM so I now have a proper macro lens. I took it out for some practice shots on Friday after work. I was at Lake Burley Griffin late that afternoon to assist my son with a task. Later, when I went home, I was also able to wander around the garden at night to see what I could photograph. I hope you enjoy the photographs below.
Read MoreSulphur-crested Cockatoos in tree hollows - Photographing around Red Hill Nature Reserve on Saturday, 20 July 2019
Red Hill Nature Reserve was again where I found myself on Saturday morning. My initial focus was to play around with an old Canon 40mm f2.8 STM pancake lens I had from 2008, not the later model. I had recently started using the lens but I was not sure how it suited my style of photography. Sorry, there are a few experimental photos with that lens below so feel free to skip those to the see the birds below. I had a good play around with it before I went back to the telephoto lens to see what wildlife was around. It was another fantastic morning to be out on Red Hill. I again came across two species of pardalotes before encountering different Sulphur-crested Cockatoos checking out two separate tree hollows. Later that day I found myself at Lake Burley Griffin. It was a social occasion rather than a photographic one but I still had my camera with me, once again seeing what I could do with a 40mm lens. I have included some of those photos at the bottom, including of a pair of Magpie-larks. I hope you enjoy the photographs below.
Read MoreCompromise, no matter the obstacle, there is always a path around it - Photographing on the Bullen Range Nature Reserve on Saturday, 6 July 2019
After last Sunday at Cotter Bend, the Bullen Range Nature Reserve (sorry, there is no official page for this nature reserve) appealed to me as a place to ride my mountain bike while also taking my camera. Unfortunately, due to weight and size, I could not take my 100-400 telephoto lens, only my 18-55mm kit lens. As I was riding my bike, I was not really able to devote my attention photography so I missed a Wedge-tailed Eagle that landed on a tree beside the track before immediately flying off to the side. I could also hear so many other birds around me but could not spare the time to search for them. The weather was not great and I began to realise the track was rougher than expected so it took me longer to traverse the ridge line than I had planned. Between trying to avoid being away from my family for too long and not really having good lighting conditions I did not take many photos with my camera. I took some photographs of the scenery with my iPhone but I decided not to paste them here because they are really just point and shoot photos. I did take this photograph above with my camera because I really loved the single tree in the middle of the road. I do not know the back story to the tree’s unlikely location but initially, after laughing, I thought what a brilliant sign of compromise. What I mean is, either somebody saying the road needs to go along the ridge but we can split it for this tree or two people decided on having the road go around the tree because they could not agree as to which side of the tree the road should go. After pondering the tree while I photographed it, I decided to call it the ‘compromise tree’. Sorry, no other photographs today but I hope you enjoy the compromise tree.
Read MoreMy hobby's first birthday
I did not plan this but I suddenly realised the fist bird I photographed as part of my hobby was an Australian Pelican (Pelecanus conspicillatus). I say first bird in the sense that it was on our family holiday driving to Queensland, the holiday where I rekindled my interest in birds and nature, and I used my iPhone to take the photograph on the left. It was the first bird I entered into my Bird Journal application. I can still recall a sense of excitement when the bird was near. It was on the Hastings River in northern NSW, near mangroves. I was always fascinated by mangrove swamps and I could not get enough of them. The whole scene evoked a lot of childhood memories for family holidays when I was a boy. Well that photograph, as I said, my first photograph for this hobby was on 17 April 2018. I took the photograph on the right on 13 April 2019, almost a year later while I was at Nielsen Park, and I was not expecting to see a pelican. I am glad I have pelicans bookending my first year. They are a wonderful bird, very iconic, an unmistakable form that most people will recognise. Again, I did not plan this, I just found it a happy coincidence I wanted to share. I am looking forward to many more years with this hobby.
Prehistoric Canberra - Woolshed Creek Fossil Site and the fossil collection at Geoscience Australia
This post is a bit different as it does not have any birds in it. This post is more about the prehistoric life of Canberra as seen at two sites, Woolshed Creek Fossil Site and the fossil collection at Geoscience Australia. I blogged about the birds I saw at the Woolshed Creek Fossil Site here.
Read MoreThe 100th species of bird I have photographed, a Black-shouldered Kite
I am no twitcher but I thought why not have a blog post to mark the 100th species of bird I have photographed. However, before I go any further let me make a confession, this may not actually be the 100th species of bird I have photographed since taking up this hobby eight months ago in April 2018. I am using an electronic bird note keeping program called Bird Journal. It is a fantastic program that is cross-platform as well as cross referencing my sightings by species and location. I currently have 99 species listed so when I enter this kite it will be 100. My confession is this sighting is not chronologically correct, as it is after my few days in Sydney over Christmas where I know I photographed some new species, most of which were introduced species. I felt I did not want my 100th bird to be a non-native, some weird orno-natoinalism perhaps??? Well, since this is my hobby, when I came across this bird unexpectedly during my visit to the Woolshed Creek Fossil Site on Thursday, 27 December 2018, blogpost to follow, I figured this was going to be my 100th species. So I can officially say this is the 100th species of bird I have listed as having photographed, or for short, the 100th species of bird I have photographed.
Read MoreWildlife Photography for Enthusiasts Workshop at the Australian Museum on Saturday, 3 November 2018
A big thanks to the Australian Museum, Photology from Digital Camera Warehouse and Australian Wildlife Displays for a wonderful day at the Wildlife Photography for Enthusiasts Workshop held at the Australian Museum, in Sydney, on Saturday, 3 November 2018. I drove up from Canberra to attend the workshop and I had a wonderful day.
Read MoreOne of my photos was featured on Canberra Nature Map
Came home to a nice email from Canberra Nature Map to say the above image had been featured on the website. It made my day😀 Many thanks to Canberra Nature Map for choosing one of my images.
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