Hi and welcome to my Blog, my name is Paul Riddle and I live in south Leicestershire, UK. Back in August 2007 my quest began to locate as many local Little Owl territories as possible. The driving force was a reported decline in the uk numbers so I thought I would do my bit and conduct a study in my area. After 7 years and countless hours out in the field I have detected over 200 different sites. With a thirst for a greater understanding of the owls a more comprehensive monitoring and nest box programme then commenced. This also now includes monitoring the local and very sparse population of Barn Owls, please pop back occasionally and catch up with the life and times of my owls and any other wildlife that I come across. I hope you enjoy your visit!!!

Wednesday 3 April 2013

Lincolnshire

Due to the fact that there has been plenty to post about during recent events locally I have fallen behind with what else I've been up to. During the Easter break I opted to abandon my local owls, (well only for a day), instead I chose to have a day out in Lincolnshire. I chose this area because after looking at the annual BTO ringing reports it seems as though Lincolnshire has a very healthy population of Barn Owls, even more than Norfolk!
 
I'd spent a couple of days studying maps and trawling the Internet, it is a huge county but eventually I'd pin pointed where I was going to go  and my day was planned. It was a 4.15am start and my chosen area was only just over an hours drive away, much better than Norfolk which is 2 hours on a good run.
 
It turned out to be a very productive day, in total Barn Owls were seen at 8 different locations, none of the sighting were close and consequently my images were not up to the quality of those I have been getting of late in Leicestershire (he says with tongue in cheek!) but the areas reputation of having a good population definitely turned out to be true.
 
The one thing that really separates this area from my home county is how flat the terrain is, this made it a lot easier for locating the daytime hunting Barn Owls.
 
 
 
There are a lot of roadside barns and derelict buildings in the area, just perfect for housing day time roosting owls. This image below was the closest I got to a Barn Owl all day (and that still was a fair distance), the image was taken from the car and the bird seemed as intrigued with me as I was with it!
 
 
During the day 4 Little Owl sites were also stumbled upon, and honestly that was without even trying! I guess it was a case of knowing where to look and employing the field craft techniques that I'd learnt over the years. I took hundreds of images and these few below are just a random selection from the 4 different sites.
 
 
It was a bizarre day weather wise, one minute it was brilliant sunshine the next it was snowing!
 
 
 
 
Not quite in focus and a heavy crop, but I like the posture in this next image, I thought it best viewed in a monochrome style.
 
 
 

This next image is my personal favourite of a Little Owl from the day (I am a sucker for dark backgrounds) the owl was perched on top of an old steel tank and I liked the way it peered around the pipe whilst being caught perfectly by the slither of sunlight.
 
 
 
The icing on the cake though were the fly past views of Male Marsh Harrier, what a bird!! These images are very heavy crops, too far away really for my 300mm lens but  what the heck they are by a country mile the best I have ever achieved.
 
 
 
It was a brilliant day, the conditions could have been better but I loved every second I was there, I can't wait for a return visit, of which I am sure will be very soon!

6 comments:

  1. What an amazing day you had Paul! Fabulous set of images but, at the risk of being a heretic, if they were mine (I wish!) my favourite would be the Marsh Harrier shots!

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  2. Loving this blog glad I stumbled across it through mine! Keep up the good work!

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  3. You've under sold them Marsh Harrier images, a deceptively hard bird to get the right exposure on.I like them. Great images and it would be churlish of me to pick a favourite but it does have to be the LO peering around the tank, a top image.

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  4. This is why you are the Guru - eight different sites in one day. 99.9 per cent of the human species go through life without seeing eight Barn Owls and you've seen that many in one day! We're not worthy man!

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  5. Hi Paul,

    I know this post is extremely belated but do you sharing the locations that you saw these owls please?
    I'm a budding wildlife photographer from Lincolnshire and would love to see some wild owls in my home county.

    Thanks,

    Louis

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  6. Hi Paul,

    I know this post is extremely belated but do you sharing the locations that you saw these owls please?
    I'm a budding wildlife photographer from Lincolnshire and would love to see some wild owls in my home county.

    Thanks,

    Louis

    ReplyDelete