Tumgik
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Local Doves @ Hunstanton.. by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Beautiful park on the coast @ Hunstanton..
1 note · View note
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Antibes France by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Stormy Skies @ Antibes
1 note · View note
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Thornham Harbour Norfolk Wildlife Trust
flickr
Thornham Harbour Norfolk Wildlife Trust by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Holme Dunes National Nature Reserve..The Holme Dunes NNR includes the whole of Ragged Marsh salt marsh, and extends south to include all of Thornham Harbour where it lies beside Staithe Lane. It can be accessed via the Coast Path near the visitor centre (but not easily, if at all, in a wheelchair), or from Thornham village by car. Thornham Harbour is an excellent birding venue, with waders and wildfowl on the seaward side, birds such as wheatears, twite and linnets mainly on the landward side, and marsh harriers almost ever-present over the grazing marshes
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
HOUGHTON COTTAGE by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: beautiful cottage, in this wonderful rural west Sussex village
1 note · View note
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
OLD FARM HOUGHTON
flickr
OLD FARM HOUGHTON by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: www.adamswaine.co.uk WEST SUSSEX VILLAGES
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Salt Marsh @ Thornham Norfolk...
flickr
Salt Marsh @ Thornham Norfolk... by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Thornham Harbour where it lies beside Staithe Lane. It can be accessed via the Coast Path near the visitor centre (but not easily, if at all, in a wheelchair), or from Thornham village by car. Thornham Harbour is an excellent birding venue, with waders and wildfowl on the seaward side, birds such as wheatears, twite and linnets mainly on the landward side, and marsh harriers almost ever-present over the grazing marshes. Increasingly red kite are present overhead, too. Besides the birding, the spectacle of the harbour and saltmarsh being completely covered by the sea at high spring tides is an attraction in itself.
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
"Rock Pools @ Hunstanton"
flickr
"Rock Pools @ Hunstanton" by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Lovely sandy beach with rock pools
1 note · View note
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Meadow Pipit
flickr
Meadow Pipit by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Meadow pipits can be difficult to spot as their plumage often blends into surrounding vegetation. They have olive-brown upperparts, with broad black streaks on the head, mantle and back. The upperwing is darker with pale edges. Meadow pipits’ tails are dark brown with a green fringe, they have paler underparts, and the underwing is whitish. They have slender bills which are dark brown with a pale base. Eyes are dark brown, and their legs and feet are yellow-brown with a long hind claw. Male and female meadow pipits look similar while juveniles are browner with paler underparts. Their streaks are also not as dark
5 notes · View notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
"Bird on a Wire"...Norfolk
flickr
"Bird on a Wire"...Norfolk by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Meadow pipit..The meadow pipit is a common nesting bird of moorland, heathland and rough grassland. In the autumn and winter, it moves out of upland areas to lowlands where it gathers in small flocks and can be found on farmland and saltmarshes. In the spring, it performs a fluttering, 'parachute' display flight. There are 2 million breeding territories in the UK
1 note · View note
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Black-headed gull
flickr
Black-headed gull by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Not really a black-headed bird, more chocolate-brown - in fact, for much of the year, it has a white head. It is most definitely not a 'seagull' and is found commonly almost anywhere inland. Black-headed gulls are sociable, quarrelsome, noisy birds, usually seen in small groups or flocks, often gathering into larger parties where there is plenty of food, or when they are roosting
3 notes · View notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
The Manor House by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: The 15thc Manor House at Temple Guiting Gloucs, just magnificent place to stay and visit...in the rural Cotswolds. www.adamswaine.co.uk
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Raindrops on Pink.. by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Lovely light in the little coastal park at Hunstanton Norfolk
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Resting on the Cliffs @ Hunstanton by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Hunstanton Fulmars..on the beautiful coastal cliffs
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
"Follow the Yellow Green Path"
flickr
"Follow the Yellow Green Path" by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: In the West Norfolk village of Great Massingham..lovely
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
"Roadside Beauty" by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Cabbage field in Great Massingham West Norfolk village
1 note · View note
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
"Little Cottage Garden" by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: Burnham Market is an English village and civil parish near the north coast of Norfolk. Burnham Market is one of the Burnhams, a group of adjacent villages. It results from a merger of three original villages: Burnham Sutton, Burnham Ulph and Burnham Westgate.
0 notes
aisphoto-posts · 4 years
Video
Creeks @ Thornham Norfolk
flickr
Creeks @ Thornham Norfolk by Adam Swaine Via Flickr: We were soon off along the coastal path heading towards Holme, and the Norfolk Wildlife Trust's reserve at Holme Dunes. At Thornham harbour – really just a few boats moored to some rather ramshackle looking landing stages – the marshes stretch either side of the road that leads to a small raised car park once the site of a large grain store. The channel was deeper then, and much larger boats than the few pleasure craft now here could access this far inland. Not so long ago farming supported most of the communities near here, and the ability for fairly substantial vessels to be able to transport the crop pretty much anywhere must have been invaluable. If you don’t mind getting muddy – and I do mean muddy – you can gather a crop of your own here; samphire
0 notes