Tuesday 30 December 2008

RSPB Guide to Birdwatching . . . .
I was pleased to supply the front cover images for the NEW 'RSPB Guide to Birdwatching' publication shown below. This book is now available from all good book shops! I have also been involved with several other major publications over the last year, including being the commissioned photographer for the 'New Naturalist' title: 'A History of Ornithology' by Peter Bircham, one of the top ten contributing photographers for the two volume SOC 'Birds of Scotland' by Ron Forrester and Ian Andrews and a contributing photographer for 'Petrels night and Day' by Magnus Rob and Killian Mullarney.


Wednesday 19 November 2008

SOUTHERN EXPOSURE . . .
My 'Shetland Exposure' Blog will be 'Southern Exposure' whilst I'm not on Shetland/Fair Isle. . . . Yesterday, on the 18th November, Phil and I successfully twitched the Steppe Grey Shrike on the  Lincolnshire coast. A great bird and extremely tame. High quality, pin-sharp colour prints available from 6 x 4" to A3 ! Please email me with requests: rebecca@rebeccanason.com

Monday 17 November 2008

Sibe Sunday at Quendale - 2nd November . . .
Birding at Quendale on Sunday gave us some great views of 3 Siberian (Tristis) Chiffchaff which showed well for photos.  After catching up with Roger R who was also at Quendale & had been grilling the Sibe Chiffs earlier that morning, we headed back to Toab & then out for a late lunch with Helen at Bonhoga Gallery at Weisdale Mill. The evening was spent packing as our Autumn on Shetland has come to an end! This blog will now be 'Southern Exposure' until the Spring when we return!




Wednesday 5 November 2008

'NICE ONE NIKON'
The new Shetland Blog below & all images created in Autumn 2008 have been taken with the new Nikon D300 with Nikon 200-400mm VR lens -no converters & all hand-held. All taken at ISO 1600 at F5.6 !!!!! unless otherwise stated.

Please visit www.nikon.co.uk for the latest in the ULTIMATE digital camera equipment available today . . . it's NIKON all the way!

Sunday 2 November 2008

Saturday Clean up . . .
Another great day & an Island tick! We visited the Island of Mousa in the morning & helped count seals & pups - a real priviledge! During the visit we spotted a large flock of Common Eider & the elusive King Eider amongst them. Later in the afternoon after lunch in The Peerie Cafe in Lerwick (my favourite lunching spot!), we looked for the Ring-neckd Duck again. Whilst scanning the Tingwall Loch & Tufted Duck flocks a bird flew in to join them - at last we had caught up with another Shetland tick.














































Friday 31 October 2008

Winning White . . .
An added bonus last night before we left Fair Isle, was finding out that my White's Thrush image below is the SURFBIRDS RARE BIRD PHOTO OF THE MONTH - OCTOBER 2008.
As seen in Birdwatching Magazine!


Mainland Magic . . .
After a suprisingly smooth flight from Fair Isle back to mainland Shetland, we went on a twitching spree! First was Sandgarth for a very active Coal Tit which was busy removing peanuts from a bird table & stashing them in nearby vegetation before returning for more. This was our first Coal Tit for Shetland - a rare bird here! We then drove to Kirkabister where, after some searching & false alarms (Great Northern Divers), we located the White-billed Diver which has returned to winter here again & was a British tick for me. Our next stop was a very good fish & chip shop in Lerwick, followed by a visit to Clickimin Loch where we dipped the Ring-necked Duck (& the one at Tingwall Loch). However we found 8 Waxwings in Lerwick, in beautiful late afternoon light, gorging themselves on ripe rosehip fruits. Our last twitch of the day was to Fladdabister for another rare Shetland bird, a Blue Tit! - which showed well & again added another good bird to our Shetland lists!


















Thursday 30 October 2008

Farewell Fair Isle . . . last day & promised birds in!
Our last day on Fair Isle proved to be a very enjoyable one! An increasingly fresh North-easterly wind & sunshine throughout most of the day made birding the Island a pleasure. A Waxwing made a brief appearance in the New Obs Plantation first thing & later in the morning Phil trapped a Siberian Chiffchaff (Tristis) in the Obs heligoland. Deryk took all the necessary  biometrics & I photographed it (see more pics in The Ringer Blog). In the afternoon I approached a group of Shag which were busy fishing in the Havens.  The Shags were a mix of adult & 1st year birds & showed well for photographs in the shallows. Dusk came too early (around 3.30) as I headed south to catch up with a Bluethroat at Quoy. In the half light I re-found the bird which was very well marked & managed a few record shots before darkness set in. Other birds noted today included Woodcock, Greenfinch, several Chiffchaff (including Abietinus) & Blackcaps but notably less Thrushes about. Looking forward to a weekend on Shetland with good friends before heading south again (temporarily) . . . 








Wednesday 29 October 2008

Eastern Promise ? . . .
A calm & bright start to the day with light North-easterly winds, distinctly different conditions than the last ten days or so. Spirits were raised by the sighting of 3 Waxwing over at first light & the realization as the morning developed that there were a lot more 'birds in'. There were a few Blackcap, Redpoll sp, a Garden Warbler, a few Chiffchaff, good numbers of Goldcrest, a Greenfinch & a Yellowhammer. I walked down to the Havens after breakfast & had my first Waxwing of the Autumn/Winter calling overhead. On reaching the Havens a 1st year Glaucous Gull passed through North Haven & I had an adult Glaucous Gull from Buness. There wera lot more Fulmar around both out at sea & on the cliffs. I spent part of thday searching for rares & the rest chasing & photographing Fair Isle Wrens on South Haven beach as well as more Wader photography.

Monday 27 October 2008

Goodbye Autumn . . .
Today had a distinct northerly 'chill' in the air with a temperature 'feel' factor of -2 & more strong winds! It is official - winter is here! There were very few birds about but good numbers of Greylag Geese still  in the south & notable numbers of Thrushes. In the afternoon a walk to south light & back produced 8 Teal, 2 Grey Phalarope, 1 Knot, 1 Grey Heron, 1 Merlin, 1 Pied Wagtail, 25+ Lapwing, 5+ Golden Plover, plenty of Greylag Geese - 1 with orange neck ring  (BCS). In the Havens a Chaffinch remains along with 2 Long-tailed Duck &  a reduced flock of Snow Bunting. I photographed a Common Snipe in the New Plantation & several Redwing, still in abundance. A Glaucous Gull was seen eating kitchen scraps near the Obs first thing this morning. Monday nights dazzling session was not very productive with 3 Greylag Geese being caught from a flock of over 40 - and 2 of these 3 were already ringed! 

Sunday 26 October 2008

Purple Rain . . . 
Internet access has finally been restored after several days of lightning, heavy rain, hurricane force winds & numerous power cuts! Yesterday (Saturday) saw the strongest winds I have ever been out in, force 12! over 100 mph . . . it was quite difficult to walk about & not get blown over, let alone pick up the bins or camera! Watching the sea & skies became fascinating, even more so when a large thunder & lightning storm rolled around the Island on Friday night - seeing Sheep Rock lit up by purple lightning was quite something, I had never seen lightning on the Island before. Today I enjoyed photographing more Purple Sandpipers on South Haven which were very approachable. There are still good numbers of Fieldfare & Redwing about & the weekend weather brought in good numbers of waders with small flocks of Dunlin & Sanderling in the south & a lone Bar-tailed Godwit. On Friday afternoon as the weather deteriorated I had a Corncrake at the roadside up near Furse which flushed up from a roadside ditch & landed in the heather briefly before catching the wind & disappearing in the storm force winds towards north light. Also today we noted one of the Grey Phalaropes heading south past Chalet, being battered by the wind & the other Grey Phalarope had left South Haven by the evening.