Yesterday we spent the afternoon at the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust property - Potteric Carr.
As we venture into each of the many hides we always hope that this will be the time when we see something special. There is one bird that seems to evade us wherever we go. We have seen fleeting glimpses of it streaking by but one of our ambitions is to manage to take a photo.
Entering one hide we were greeted by an excited occupant telling us that the bird in question was sitting on a banking by a yellow flower. The banking in question was in the middle of the lake. It's the mound in the far distance below.
Below I've cropped the photo to help point out the banking.
Can you see the bird yet? No? Let's try move in a little closer.
How about that? You may be able to spot two white objects on the left of the mound. The bird is just above and to the right. To help he is sitting where the yellow spot is in the photo below.
Time to zoom in a bit. Now can you spot him?
Let's try even closer.
And closer still.
If it hadn't been for the binocular sporting occupants of the hide we would never have noticed the kingfisher. To be honest we are lazy bird watchers. We pop our heads out of hides and if nothing comes up and taps us on the shoulder we move on! The object of our attention sat waiting patiently allowing us enough time to take lots and lots of photo. But waiting for what?
Then out from a crevice in the banking came kingfisher number two. After some toing and froing the pair sat on a nearby bush. The red dot in the earlier photo shows the location.
Through the zoomed camera lens, we could just make out the male offering his mate a fish.
She didn't seem interested so he decided to eat it himself.
The photo below has been cropped from the previous photo.
There was then a flurry of inevitable activity after which one of the birds flew back into the nesting hole leaving the other to sit and ponder for a while.
The quality of the photos isn't good but considering the distance we were just happy to have managed to get anything that vaguely resembled a kingfisher. The bird sat still for ages - if only they had been closer we would have been able to get some fantastic shots, Still something to aspire to!