this is a young blackbird that i watched grow in my garden .
the female setting on her nest – Isn’t she beautiful ???
taken in Regents Park London recently
A Seagull flies away with its breakfast at Hawks Nest, NSW Australia
A mummy Sun Bird protecting her nest
tree with lard bird nest in desert
The nest is in the bushes in my yard. I waited until the mother flew away, and took several shots to find the one I was looking for :) Taken with a Nikon D60. / /
Northern Malaysia a turtles idea of home.
This little fella was nesting right outside our balcony!
This photo is part of the China compilation.
Acrylic and Graphite
Feeding Chick / Canon 300D / Auto / Lens; 100-400 canon
Expansive view from the Eagle’s Nest (Kehlsteinhaus) near Berchtesgaden in Bavaria. TECHNICAL INFO / Camera: Canon 400D / Lens: 17-85mm 17mm (31mm equiv)<br />Exposure: 1/25s f18 / ISO: 400 / Filter: Moose warming polariser
This was one of those near disaster moments. (not for me, for the Oystercatcher) / I took a coast trip to my friends at Port MacDonnell on Saturday, & near Racecourse Bay you can drive down the side of a drain, & then across the beach to Flinty Point. It was low tide so I had plenty of beach, & the other side of the beach you drive up onto the flint bank, which is basically what this point is made of. Just one huge pile of flint sitting on the reef with grass etc growing over it. / I followed the track which is getting over grown, right out to the edge looking over the reef at low tide. I put the Suzi into low range, 1st gear & idled it out there, so its a slow crawl & you can see whats around without scaring too much. / At the very end there is a loop what people turn their cars around & I was just starting to follow it around when a Pied Oystercatcher flew up from just in front of the car & flew down onto the reef. Seemed very strange, so I backed the car up about 10 feet & got out. In flew another Oystercatcher to join it & as I walked forward the broken wing act started. So I knew there was a nest there somewhere. So I watched where I stepped & started looking. They blend in very well, but I finally found it with one egg, right on the track where you turn around. Its slightly hollowed, & basically just a spot where the bird sits, & right next to it you can see where its partner sleeps. Not much work building this one, but its done so it blends in very well to its surroundings. / After a couple of quick snaps, I backed the car up & went to stake it out for their return. I missed the fly in as I was just aiming hte lens when they flew in. As soon as they seen the car, one sat across to the right on guard, the other went to the nest, but didnt sit. She was still unsettled with me being so close & then sat on the edge of the flint bank read to escape again. / I drove off & left them to it, didnt want the egg to get cold. Copyright Wayne Bigg All Rights Reserved. / Do not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify my photography without my express consent.
This was one of those near disaster moments. (not for me, for the Oystercatcher) / I took a coast trip to my friends at Port MacDonnell on Saturday, & near Racecourse Bay you can drive down the side of a drain, & then across the beach to Flinty Point. It was low tide so I had plenty of beach, & the other side of the beach you drive up onto the flint bank, which is basically what this point is made of. Just one huge pile of flint sitting on the reef with grass etc growing over it. / I followed the track which is getting over grown, right out to the edge looking over the reef at low tide. I put the Suzi into low range, 1st gear & idled it out there, so its a slow crawl & you can see whats around without scaring too much. / At the very end there is a loop what people turn their cars around & I was just starting to follow it around when a Pied Oystercatcher flew up from just in front of the car & flew down onto the reef. Seemed very strange, so I backed the car up about 10 feet & got out. In flew another Oystercatcher to join it & as I walked forward the broken wing act started. So I knew there was a nest there somewhere. So I watched where I stepped & started looking. They blend in very well, but I finally found it with one egg, right on the track where you turn around. Its slightly hollowed, & basically just a spot where the bird sits, & right next to it you can see where its partner sleeps. Not much work building this one, but its done so it blends in very well to its surroundings. / After a couple of quick snaps, I backed the car up & went to stake it out for their return. I missed the fly in as I was just aiming hte lens when they flew in. As soon as they seen the car, one sat across to the right on guard, the other went to the nest, but didnt sit. She was still unsettled with me being so close & then sat on the edge of the flint bank read to escape again. / I drove off & left them to it, didnt want the egg to get cold. Copyright Wayne Bigg All Rights Reserved. / Do not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify my photography without my express consent.
This was one of those near disaster moments. (not for me, for the Oystercatcher) / I took a coast trip to my friends at Port MacDonnell on Saturday, & near Racecourse Bay you can drive down the side of a drain, & then across the beach to Flinty Point. It was low tide so I had plenty of beach, & the other side of the beach you drive up onto the flint bank, which is basically what this point is made of. Just one huge pile of flint sitting on the reef with grass etc growing over it. / I followed the track which is getting over grown, right out to the edge looking over the reef at low tide. I put the Suzi into low range, 1st gear & idled it out there, so its a slow crawl & you can see whats around without scaring too much. / At the very end there is a loop what people turn their cars around & I was just starting to follow it around when a Pied Oystercatcher flew up from just in front of the car & flew down onto the reef. Seemed very strange, so I backed the car up about 10 feet & got out. In flew another Oystercatcher to join it & as I walked forward the broken wing act started. So I knew there was a nest there somewhere. So I watched where I stepped & started looking. They blend in very well, but I finally found it with one egg, right on the track where you turn around. Its slightly hollowed, & basically just a spot where the bird sits, & right next to it you can see where its partner sleeps. Not much work building this one, but its done so it blends in very well to its surroundings. / After a couple of quick snaps, I backed the car up & went to stake it out for their return. I missed the fly in as I was just aiming hte lens when they flew in. As soon as they seen the car, one sat across to the right on guard, the other went to the nest, but didnt sit. She was still unsettled with me being so close & then sat on the edge of the flint bank read to escape again. / I drove off & left them to it, didnt want the egg to get cold. Copyright Wayne Bigg All Rights Reserved. / Do not use, replicate, manipulate, redistribute, or modify my photography without my express consent.
Looking through a human birds nest
2 ft x 6 ft, acrylic on canvas / 2009 i really enjoy birds specially corvids; crows, magpies, bluejays. this piece is a copy of my memory of a crow’s nest i found about 40 feet up in the trees. actually found the real nest, not the many decoy nest they build. the space felt so safe. perfect place to raise your chicks.
The Belongil Estuary Osprey have a chick and it’s hard work for Mumma first building the nest, giving birth, incubating the chick for approximately two weeks and then feeding and protecting it until it fledges anywhere from 48 to 76 days. Mumma primarily stays on the nest but here she takes a quick breather after chasing a Sea Eagle away from the nest.
bird nest on an old barn window
The nest of a HUGE bird ! It might be a chicken or a Roc ! It was very warm and.did not smell good….I ran away from this before the creecher came back !
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