Tim Melling – Pine Bunting

Tim writes: Pine Bunting (Emberiza leucocephalus) is the eastern counterpart of the European Yellowhammer, even though the males are extremely dissimilar.  But their songs and calls sound the same, and the females look similar, except Pine Buntings lack any yellow, especially in the flight feathers.  But to complicate matters the two species interbreed where they…

Tim Melling – Black-browed Albatross

Tim writes: the parent Black-browed Albatrosses build a huge egg cup-shaped nest out of mud so they usually only nest next to streams where they have a ready supply of mud within beak’s reach, but they will repair and re-use the nest in subsequent years.  On the Falklands where I photographed these, Black-browed Albatrosses lay…

Tim Melling – the Sichuan Treecreeper

Tim writes: the Common Treecreeper was described new to science back in 1758, and even its near-identical cousin Short-toed Treecreeper was described back in 1820.  But this Sichuan Treecreeper was described new to science from 14 collected specimens in 1995, when it was thought to be a subspecies of Common Treecreeper.  But Common Treecreeper was…

Tim Melling – African Clouded Yellow

Tim writes: this shows a courting pair of African Clouded Yellows, with the typical yellow-coloured female on the left.  The female differs from the male in having spots in the wing border. This was taken with a Nikon D500 with a 300mm f4 lens at f5.6 and a 1.4x converter 1/5000 at ISO 1600

Tim Melling – Sea Otter

Tim writes: this is a Sea Otter (Enhydra lutris) propelling itself through the calm water and creating a small wave with its head.   They can weigh up to 45kg making them the heaviest member of the Weasel family.  They are even heavier than Wolverine and much heavier than Giant River Otter, which is a bit…

Tim Melling – Guillemot

Tim writes: I love the challenge of photographing birds in flight and I spent most of my time at Bempton Cliffs pointing the camera at flying birds.  The great thing about Bempton is that the cliffs are so high you can photograph birds from above, and isolate them from the background.  Guillemot wings move so…

Tim Melling – Bald Eagle

Tim writes: this is a recently-fledged Bald Eagle.  In fact, it is so recently-fledged that it still has the thread-like plumes still attached to the end of its flight feathers.  These usually fall off after the first couple of flights.  The background is the temperate rainforest of western Canada with clinging clouds.  I much prefer…

Tim Melling – Dipper

Tim writes: iiving in the Pennines I see lots of Dippers.  But they seem to prefer shady, wooded rivers to ones on the open hillside.  So I was really pleased to stumble across a pair that were nesting behind a small waterfall in full sunshine out on the open moorland.  I sat quietly and the…

Tim Melling – Grizzly Bear

Tim writes: I managed to catch this female Grizzly Bear with a little gentle sunlight on her head and shoulders.  Sunlight is in short supply in the deep valleys of British Columbia as it takes ages for the sun to rise above the mountains.  Add to that the fact that Grizzly Bears are most active…

Tim Melling – Blue-winged Teal

Tim writes: I’ve long wanted to photograph a Blue-winged Teal in flight showing its trademark blue wings.  But you can see that the speculum (the shiny panel at the back of a duck’s wing) is green.  Ironically it is the green speculum that gives rise to the name in Green-winged Teal, yet both species share…