Booted Eagle - Hieraaetus pennatus
Eurasian Sparrowhawk - Accipiter nisus
Hoverfly And ???
A Bouquet Of Dogs
Juvenile Dunnock - Prunella modularis
Blue-tailed Bee-eater (Merops philippinus)
Common Darter - Sympetrum striolatum
Great Tit - Parus major
Common Carder Bee on Sedum
European Robin - Erithacus rubecula
Honey Bee Exiting Himalayan Balsam Flower
Fishing In Deep Water
Black Darter - Sympetrum danae
Eurasian Wren - Troglodytes troglodytes
Speckled Wood - Pararge aegeria
Blue Tit - Parus caeruleus
Japanese Anemone and Fly
House Sparrow - Passer domesticus
Common Carder Bee On Purple Loosestrife
Reed Bunting - Emberiza schoeniclus
Pale-Saddled Leucozona on Hogweed
Chaffinch (Female) - Fringilla coelebs
Chaffinch (Male) - Fringilla coelebs
Buzzing Off
Juvenile European Robin - Erithacus rubecula
Cuban Knight Anole - Anolis equestris
Eurasian Nuthatch - Sitta europaea
White-Winged Dove - Zenaida asiatic
Grey Count - Tanaecia lepidea
Blue Tit - Parus caeruleus
American Redstart - Setophaga ruticilla
Through The Rushes
Marmelade Fly on Cranesbill 'Miss Heidi'
Robin - Erithacus rubecula
Chaffinch - Fringilla coelebs
Monk Parakeet (in the wild) – Myiopsitta monachus
Small Tortoiseshell - Aglais urticae
Stork-Billed Kingfisher - Pelargopsis capensis
Bullfinch - Pyrrhula pyrrhula
Striated Heron - Butorides striata
Peacock Pansy - Junonia almana
Barred Gliding Lizard - Draco taeniopterus
Clapper Rail - Rallus crepitans
Eared Dove - Zenaida auriculata
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Juvenile Starling Braving The Rain
The European Starling - Sturnus vulgaris - is known simply as the Starling in GB probably because it is so common and often appears in great numbers both in the sky and on the garden where they will eat everything in sight if they can get at it. They even manage to get a claw hold on things you wouldn't think they could just to get at food. Adults have glossy black plumage with a metallic sheen which is speckled with white at some times of year. Their legs are pink and the bill is black in winter and yellow in summer. Juveniles, like this one, have browner plumage. They will eat fruit, crops, insects and anything they can scavenge but are also host to a range of both internal and external parasites. They were introduced to North America in the nineteenth century. This juvenile was braving the weather to get some food from our bird table.
This Picture is fully © Copyrighted.
None of my images may be copied, reproduced or altered in any form or manner or placed on the internet or any other social media, or in any form of publication either print or otherwise, in any form or manner without my written permission.
This Picture is fully © Copyrighted.
None of my images may be copied, reproduced or altered in any form or manner or placed on the internet or any other social media, or in any form of publication either print or otherwise, in any form or manner without my written permission.
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