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An Idiot's guide to Ancient Woodland management


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Shooting the wildlife.

 

The woodland is managed for biodiversity so it's nice to be able to get some pictures of the organisms that have made their home here. 

 

Up until very recently we have had to rely on dodgy point and click camera phone shots taken by me and TVI 2.

 

We were recently contacted by a more capable photographer who asked if he could come to the wood to take wildlife shots. We were very pleased, and in surprisingly short order he has produced some really nice shots.

 

All photos in the next few posts courtesy of David Townrow.

 

426410823_DaveBarnOwl1.thumb.jpg.9cf9c6ead017bf7d4db8d6299d500cc2.jpg

 

1784849540_DaveBarnOwl2.jpg.1a469a95d4038dca0ac8863d0e6253f4.jpg

 

Here is the Barn Owl that we call Edna. She has taken to hunting deep inside the wood every evening. This is quite unusual behavior as Barn owls typically prefer open fields. 

 

She seems to particularly like our newly created coppice compartments as they come back quite grassy in their first year post felling. The Oak standards provide her with lots of perching options from which to look for tasty small mammal treats!

 

Barn owls very rarely nest within woodlands. They may occupy a tree with a suitable hole and cavity on the woodland edge but we think Edna may have made her home in a disused station house on the periphery of the woodland.

 


 

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20 minutes ago, the village idiot said:

Shooting the wildlife.

 

The woodland is managed for biodiversity so it's nice to be able to get some pictures of the organisms that have made their home here. 

 

Up until very recently we have had to rely on dodgy point and click camera phone shots taken by me and TVI 2.

 

We were recently contacted by a more capable photographer who asked if he could come to the wood to take wildlife shots. We were very pleased, and in surprisingly short order he has produced some really nice shots.

 

All photos in the next few posts courtesy of David Townrow.

 

426410823_DaveBarnOwl1.thumb.jpg.9cf9c6ead017bf7d4db8d6299d500cc2.jpg

 

1784849540_DaveBarnOwl2.jpg.1a469a95d4038dca0ac8863d0e6253f4.jpg

 

Here is the Barn Owl that we call Edna. She has taken to hunting deep inside the wood every evening. This is quite unusual behavior as Barn owls typically prefer open fields. 

 

She seems to particularly like our newly created coppice compartments as they come back quite grassy in their first year post felling. The Oak standards provide her with lots of perching options from which to look for tasty small mammal treats!

 

Barn owls very rarely nest within woodlands. They may occupy a tree with a suitable hole and cavity on the woodland edge but we think Edna may have made her home in a disused station house on the periphery of the woodland.

 


 

Great pictures

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5 minutes ago, AJStrees said:

Beautiful lighting on the fox shot and nice looking guy too. Do you know what equipment he was using?

I'm not fully up to speed on the very latest developments in camera technology but it looked like a black box with a long thingy sticking out of the front.

 

I'll ask David for a bit more detail and get back to you.

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