Two of my aunts
This morning
Up the street
Optimistic spider
Another twa corbies
Truck's arse, in this case that of an ambulance
Starling
Our full of it from the back door
Mid-winter spider
Can't decide
Decided
Snowy evening with bus passing
The neighbourhood graveyard
Two purples and a goldfinch
Finches in the snow
Red Crossbill
Moon, Jupiter and Venus
Together, almost and for only a short time
The lane, or cove, with no name
A few minutes too late
Underwing's underside
Self portrait of sorts
Bleachers and backstop
Very small landscape
We are slow
Sharpie
"Quelle belle brume!"
Pigeon
Mourning dove
Get a room
Walter and Roger
Cold rhododendron
Still lit, by popular demand
My neighbour tending his fire
Purity
Mars leading the Moon across the sky
Jove and two of his dancing companions
Breaking fast
Mourning dove in the morning rain on New Year's Da…
Neighbourly light
Sky
On the third day of Christmas
Skinny sliver Moon
Done and toasted
Goldy
1/80 • f/2.8 • 150.0 mm • ISO 250 •
OLYMPUS IMAGING CORP. E-M1
OLYMPUS M.40-150mm F2.8
EXIF - See more detailsSee also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
63 visits
"Back off, luh!"


There are two, sometimes three, flickers that have pretty well exclusive access to our suet. They easily scare off the smaller birds like juncos and chickadees when they are in the flickers' way.
But today, after sixty-odd cm of snow, a phalanx of starlings, each nearly as big as a flicker, were trying to get at the suet. This flicker was having nothing to do with their usurpation.
He made himself look big, with a dangerous bill and lunged at them. The starlings didn't reciprocate much, but they weren't put off by him either. They'd just shuffle in closer from the sides and above, and drive him into another frenzy.
Finally, there were just too many starlings for him, and he left the scene.
But today, after sixty-odd cm of snow, a phalanx of starlings, each nearly as big as a flicker, were trying to get at the suet. This flicker was having nothing to do with their usurpation.
He made himself look big, with a dangerous bill and lunged at them. The starlings didn't reciprocate much, but they weren't put off by him either. They'd just shuffle in closer from the sides and above, and drive him into another frenzy.
Finally, there were just too many starlings for him, and he left the scene.
homaris has particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Sign-in to write a comment.