I've not been well lately! My self-diagnosis leaves me in no doubt that that I have a bad case of cabin-fever. This as a result of not getting out into the wilds for about a month now. I've had to console myself with browsing through my old camera-trap images. However, while doing this I decided that I needed to pull together a post about birds - specifically those that have walked in front of my cameras.
We're extremely fortunate to have a wide variety of large raptors, as well as terrestrial species, that are quite big enough to trigger a camera at some distance. So while I've only once actually set out to get images of birds (African penguins) I do get other big fellows fairly frequently. These are some of my favourites:
Secretary Bird (Sagittarius serpentarius) at a spot where I was hoping to get an image of a leopard recently seen in the area.
Lappet-faced Vulture (Torgos tracheliotus) bullying the other birds at the water-hole.
An African Hawk-Eagle (Hieraaetus spilogaster). What was amazing about this series of images was that the other mammals in the images waited in the background for it to finish (about 20 minutes) before drinking themselves.
Marabou Stork (Leptoptilos crumeniferus)
Kori Bustard (Ardeotis kori) - apparently the worlds heaviest flying bird.
A male Ostrich (Struthio camelus) with his young.
Hadeda Ibis (Bostrychia hagedash) an extremely successful species whose range is expanding dramatically in Southern Africa.
Black-headed Heron (Ardea melanocephala).
However I can feel the fever starting to subside already since I'm headed off next week to a remarkable place called the Tankwa Karoo National Park. Its renowned for its natural beauty, rather than abundance of mammals, but I'm hopeful that the cameras will pick up something interesting.
I'll keep you posted.........
What is BushCam Adventures?
BushCam Adventures attempts to share some of the amazing images, stories and insights that I've collected during my camera-trapping adventures.
Showing posts with label Lappet-Faced Vulture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lappet-Faced Vulture. Show all posts
Sunday, 21 October 2012
Friday, 27 January 2012
Who said Vultures were dirty?
I don't recall ever being called a bunny-hugger but that isn't a label that would worry me particularly. But a vulture-hugger....mmmm...I don't think so! I've seen way too many vultures with their bald heads covered in blood and whatever else they find in the body cavities of dead animals. So I was delighted to see these images on a camera-trap that we'd set up at a small water-hole for a few days.
The early-morning shift was quiet but the water-hole soon became a popular spot for White-Backed (Gyps africanus), Cape (Gyps coprotheres) and Lappet-Faced (Aegypius tracheliotos) vultures. Birds that had probably recently squabbled over bits of carrion suddenly became bathing-buddies.
So am I now a vulture-hugger? Probably not.
The early-morning shift was quiet but the water-hole soon became a popular spot for White-Backed (Gyps africanus), Cape (Gyps coprotheres) and Lappet-Faced (Aegypius tracheliotos) vultures. Birds that had probably recently squabbled over bits of carrion suddenly became bathing-buddies.
So am I now a vulture-hugger? Probably not.
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