Monday, December 30, 2019

Silvereye Season Highlights 2019

Every November, the Silvereyes come to visit the bottlebrush right outside my window, putting on a show of daring acrobatics, cheerful chirping, and occasional clumsy antics. For the past decade, it's been one of the photographic highlights of the year for me (and a big reason why I got into photography in the first place).

Good Morning!

While this year, I couldn't spend the whole day plonked in front of the window keeping an eye of them, I was lucky that the times I was around (e.g. early morning, before rushing out the door to get to work, and when unwinding after a long day at work) turned out to be the times when some of the most interesting lighting/activities happened anyway ;)



So, without further ado, here are some of my favourite shots from this year :)



It's hard not to love those little tuffs of fluff sticking out 😍

I took these shots of this cutie pie early in the first week. The first flowers to open up this year were a LOT closer to the window than in previous years (this bunch was within 30-50 cm, but some were opening up between 0-10 cm away from the window!  The only downside was that these were within the central window pane - i.e. right behind my monitor, making the ergonomics of getting a lens in there "challenging").


This fat boi may have been a juvenile - I'm not 100% sure, but there was a juvenile excitedly chattering away, and the only bird in sight was this one.


 Pretty birdie on a stick




It's always a treat seeing the feats of gymnastics the silvereyes put on darting between branches and hanging from impossible perches.

For example, one night after work, there was a really strong easterly/noreasterly (seabreeze) blowing, just as 2-3 silvereyes were feasting on the bottlebrush. It was a super challenging but also super fun + rewarding little photoshoot trying to capture those 2-3 silvereyes as they flitted around the bottlebrush in a stiff breeze. The tallest branch was swaying violently back and forth (tracing a barf-inducing arc that was ~1m long at times), but yet, through this all they somehow just clung on and carried on calmly eating as if nothing was wrong.


I love how this shot turned out with the pastel-ish colours. This was taken after they disappeared for a week - judging by the orange patches on some of their heads, I presume a giant flax had just started flowering the previous week, attracting all of them away... I haven't found the offending plant yet, but hopefully one of these years I will!


It wasn't until later in the season that multiple silvereyes started to arrive in small flocks. I caught this pair one morning before work (the first time after they disappeared for a week, and shortly after a cold snap overnight IIRC). In fact, there were often times when there were actually 3 (or maybe even 4) hopping around the bush at the same time, though I only really managed to catch 2 of them at a time.


Spot the birdie!
(This one is best viewed larger)

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