Showing posts with label Lyme Park. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lyme Park. Show all posts

Sunday, 19 June 2011

Happy New Year!

Apologies for being 6 months too late and sincere thanks to all who have contacted me and encouraged me to post during my inactivity.
The main questions people have been asking is what I've been up to and why haven't I been taking photographs...
Well the simple truth is I just haven't felt like it.
Without trying to get all deep and philosophical...
For me, my photography is a form of escapism and it gives me opportunity to wander off on my own and be alone with my thoughts...I find a great peace being alone with nature in some isolated place.
In recent months, I guess I haven't been at peace with myself and therefore lost my motivation.
In the last couple of weeks I've started to become interested again...I've been looking at the work of other photographers and I've been trying to come up with ideas for a project that will hopefully inspire me to get back out there.
Thanks once again for your well wishes and support...Hopefully I'll have something new to offer very soon.
This is after all a photography blog, so I guess it's only right to leave you with a photograph.
I don't think I've shared this one before...
It's a sunset which I titled 'Last Light at Lyme Park' and I was fortunate enough to win the Talk Photography 'Trees' competition with it last year...

Sunday, 10 October 2010

Ready For The Rut

Red Deer at Lyme Park in Cheshire are readying themselves for the Rutting Season.
The bellowing has started and there is evidence of the 'digging' behaviour, so it's only a matter of time before the Rut really gets going...

Thursday, 22 April 2010

Fire in the Sky

Yesterday, the recent beautiful silence in the Sky's was broken for the first time in nearly a week as UK commercial air traffic resumed operations after the chaos caused by the Icelandic volcano.
"So that's that then" many would assume and we can all get back to normal...
But can we? Should we?

A volcano nearly a thousand miles north of us erupts and throws Britain and most of Europe into near madness!
So today after a second day of near normal air traffic, I've listened smiling inwardly as people started to talk about their holiday plans as if the events of the last 6 days never happened.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't this still a very active volcano that could gush out plumes of ash and other toxins at just about anytime in the near future?
OK, I'm not saying we should all just put our lives on hold and not travel anywhere...that's not what I'm getting at.
What concerns me is, that some people and this very much includes the media, just don't get it...Or to put it another way, they just don't seem to care.

How many news stories have we seen this week featuring stranded passengers and heartbroken holidaymakers?
Answer...Too Many!

I feel a great opportunity has been lost in the past week to educate and perhaps turn people on to the power and wonder of nature and perhaps even install a new respect for the natural world in some.
In this tacky age of junk TV, it would have been very refreshing to see.

Last night, I watched the sunset at Lyme Park in Cheshire and the effects of the Eyjafjallajokull Volcano were still very apparent...

Tuesday, 9 March 2010

Lyme Park Sunset

I had an hour to kill early yesterday evening and after Sunday's failed attempt at the Mountain Hare, I thought I might have a look for it's Brown Cousin at Lyme Park in Cheshire.

March of course is the time of the 'Mad March Hare' and the moorland landscape of this National Trust parkland is a good place to spot these shy creatures.
Dawn and dusk are the best times of days to see Brown Hares and in the Spring, the Hares are very active and can often be seen 'Boxing'.


I had a quick scout around the 'Cage' area of the park but my luck was out again!
However there was method in my madness and I chose this part of the park for good reason...

This is a place I have photographed on many occasions and past experience has taught me that after a beautiful sunny day, there isn't a better area of this delightful place to capture the setting sun...

Saturday, 16 January 2010

2010: The Year So Far...


Ideally, I really should have started all this blogging business on New Years Day, so just to keep everything neat and tidy here is a quick review of what I've been up to this month so far...

January 1st saw me leave the house at first light (not at all hungover) for the short drive to Lyme Park in Cheshire where I set about photographing Red Deer.

The light was beautiful this morning, but there was a very harsh frost and the temperature was -6c which meant I had trouble even pressing the shutter on my camera because my hands were so cold!
Over the Christmas break, I had tried on 3 other occasions to capture these elusive creatures and failed each time, so I was quite pleased to have manged to get some half decent shots.




My biggest dilemma of the morning was knowing how close I could get to the deer...



Although I was shooting at 500mm and keeping a very close eye on all around me, there is something quite unnerving when a huge Red Deer Stag moves curiously towards you and I certainly wouldn't like to get into an argument with one.



It's times like this when common sense and of course respect for the animal in it's natural surroundings take hold...