Turns out that my January post was a bit optomistic but after a year or more of bad health the Doctors have discovered the problem. Several visits to hospital and now waiting for an operation. It's great news because initial treatment has made me feel miles better and things are all improving.
I've had to slightly modify my aspirations for the future but will be starting to do more wildlife photography into the new year and I'm updating the print website at the moment.
Watch this space.......
Thursday, 29 October 2009
Monday, 1 September 2008
Wild Ocean Photography
I have just added a link to my links page for
Wildlife and coastal images of Scotland by Rosanna Milligan
http://www.wildoceanphotography.com
Rosanna has some impressive underwater images from off the west coast which are well worth viewing.
While on the subject of links, can anyone reading this who has a link to photo-tech on their web site please change it to connect to the
wildlife surveys index page
or whichever page they feel is most relevant.
Wildlife and coastal images of Scotland by Rosanna Milligan
http://www.wildoceanphotography.com
Rosanna has some impressive underwater images from off the west coast which are well worth viewing.
While on the subject of links, can anyone reading this who has a link to photo-tech on their web site please change it to connect to the
wildlife surveys index page
or whichever page they feel is most relevant.
Sunday, 31 August 2008
Trees for Life

I love trees and mountains, and trees are something there is precious little of in Scotland's Highlands, except for isolated remnants of the old Caledonian Pine Forest and modern plantations; but if Trees for Life is successful, then future generations may once again enjoy the Wood of Caledon.
Trees for Life's Vision
Tuesday, 26 August 2008
Back to the hills of dream

Well, that was a long four months and anyone keeping an eye on me will know that the old web site has gone, never to return.
I don't really want to talk about what's been happening since I last blogged other than to say that I'm pretty pissed off with boats, governments, EU legislation, banks and anything else that sucks blood.
Me and the dog Kali are stuck with a boat that's going nowhere soon, licking wounds and contemplating a singular lack of resources. Still, no point in being downhearted, life goes on and all that shit.
Anyway, the hills are getting us back. I've decided to pick up where I left off over two years ago with the Highland Red Suirrel survey and wildlife photography. The boat's a cheap place to live for the moment and hopefully, when the countries economy starts to climb out of recession and people have got over the recent massive hike in fuel prices, I might find someone who's interested in buying it. The time can't come too soon for me. As Jeremiah Johnson said, in the film of the same name, "I've been to a city".
Don't get me wrong, Inverness has it's good points. It's just that I'm not very good with crowds. I like to wake up to forests, mountains, the wind in the trees and birds singing; not all this shit called civilisation with sirens, engines, drunks and idiots fighting and shouting.
It's time to get the f**k out of Dodge.
I'll start posting my normal stuff as soon as I've calmed down a bit. See you later.
Wednesday, 23 April 2008
In memory of a good friend

On the 28th February 2007, Iain Everson who was a very good friend, passed away suddenly.
He is warmly remembered and sadly missed, especially by his daughters, Michelle and Heidi and his partner Heidi Goehrke who has recently launched a photographic and digital art web site of work they did together; which can be seen at http://vitualeyes.co.uk/
Iain and I were from farming backgrounds with similar interests and occupations. When life eventually introduced us to each other, back in 1998, we were to discover that we had been following a weirdly parallel course since the 1970's knowing a lot of the same people, all the way from Oxford to Inverness.
I wish Iain could have stayed around to see us finish the boat refit, so that he and Heidi could have enjoyed it with us; but that was not meant to be.
There's obviously more to the story but this isn't the place. Suffice to say bon voyage mon ami.
Thursday, 17 April 2008
Wildlife Online
http://www.wildlifeonline.me.uk/
This is an excellent site for wildlife reference created by Marc Baldwin in Southampton, England.
Marc has worked hard to develope Widlife Online over the last few years and being qualified in the natural sciences enables him to provide data in an informed and authorative context.
I'm sure that as the project continues Wildlife Online will become a well recognised resource and would recommend the site to anyone searching for good wildlife info' on the net.
This is an excellent site for wildlife reference created by Marc Baldwin in Southampton, England.
Marc has worked hard to develope Widlife Online over the last few years and being qualified in the natural sciences enables him to provide data in an informed and authorative context.
I'm sure that as the project continues Wildlife Online will become a well recognised resource and would recommend the site to anyone searching for good wildlife info' on the net.
Saturday, 9 February 2008
The Hills of Dream
The tide of noon is upon the hills.
Amid leagues of purple heather, of pale amethyst ling, stand isled great yellow-lichened granite boulders, fringed with tawny bracken.
In the vast dome of blue there is nought visible save a speck of white, a gannet that drifts above the invisible sea. And through the hot tide of noon goes a breath as of the heart of flame.
Far off, far off, I know dim hills of dream, and there my heart suspends as a white bird longing for home: and there, oh there, is a heart of flame, and the breath of it is as the tide of noon upon these hills of dream.
Fiona Macleod
From the Hills of Dream - 1902
Amid leagues of purple heather, of pale amethyst ling, stand isled great yellow-lichened granite boulders, fringed with tawny bracken.
In the vast dome of blue there is nought visible save a speck of white, a gannet that drifts above the invisible sea. And through the hot tide of noon goes a breath as of the heart of flame.
Far off, far off, I know dim hills of dream, and there my heart suspends as a white bird longing for home: and there, oh there, is a heart of flame, and the breath of it is as the tide of noon upon these hills of dream.
Fiona Macleod
From the Hills of Dream - 1902
Red Deer Hind

The Red Deer hind was browsing on heath under a cloud of midges and I was camode up on the edge of the bog waiting for a Roe buck when the hind came quietly out from the forests edge.
She was there for a fair time when there was a change of wind direction and she caught my scent, which put her head up (the moment of this shot); but she couldn't figure out where I was. After some hesitation she decided to go back into the trees and drifted off, still testing the air.
I'd been in one position for long enough and had more or less given up on the buck so I stood up. When my head cleared the bracken there was a crash to the right about thirty feet away and I was greeted with the sight of the retreating rear end of the Roe Buck I'd been waiting to see.
Seems to be the way of it with me and Roe deer. I've missed some fantastic shots and never, so far, managed to get one I would want to publish. It'll happen right one of these days and the red hind made it worth the effort on this occasion.
Posted by
Ron Bury
at
11:50
Labels:
art prints,
butterfly,
deer,
giclee prints,
hind,
red admiral,
red deer,
roe buck,
wildlife
Friday, 1 February 2008
Wild Mountain Thyme
Apparently not Irish in origin as has been suggested but a Scottish song based on Pailsey poet R Tannahill's song The Braes of Balquidder.
This video of The Silencers performing Wild Mountain Thyme was directed by Steve price with Photography by John Brown in 1996 and shot around Lochranza on the Isle of Arran.
Ther are 28 videos of performances of Wild Mountain Thyme on the tube and much as I like such as The Corries I keep coming back to The Silencers.
I was inspired to add this after visiting http://roonthehoosemindthedresser.blogspot.com/
I think it's great and makes you home sick when you're at home.
This video of The Silencers performing Wild Mountain Thyme was directed by Steve price with Photography by John Brown in 1996 and shot around Lochranza on the Isle of Arran.
Ther are 28 videos of performances of Wild Mountain Thyme on the tube and much as I like such as The Corries I keep coming back to The Silencers.
I was inspired to add this after visiting http://roonthehoosemindthedresser.blogspot.com/
I think it's great and makes you home sick when you're at home.
Thursday, 31 January 2008
Free Screen backgrounds
Free wildlife and wilderness screen backgrounds to download
Just click on an image to view full size in a new window.

Whooper Swans on Loch Achonachie

Red Deer Stag browsing Strathconon hillside in winter
Red Deer stag with 10 point antlers in velvet
Looking west up Strathconon Glen in Easter Ross
Looking south down Loch Lochy in the Great Glen

Oystercatcher flight across Cromarty Bay

Atlantic Puffin in the rain on Handa Island.
These images can be downloaded for personal use.
The images are 1440 x 900 pixels at 96ppi and the average size is about 100Kb. They work perfectly on a wide screen laptop and can be sampled and downloaded directly from the page in seconds.
I hope you enjoy them.
Just click on an image to view full size in a new window.

Whooper Swans on Loch Achonachie

Red Deer Stag browsing Strathconon hillside in winter
Red Deer stag with 10 point antlers in velvet
Looking west up Strathconon Glen in Easter Ross
Looking south down Loch Lochy in the Great Glen

Oystercatcher flight across Cromarty Bay

Atlantic Puffin in the rain on Handa Island.
These images can be downloaded for personal use.
The images are 1440 x 900 pixels at 96ppi and the average size is about 100Kb. They work perfectly on a wide screen laptop and can be sampled and downloaded directly from the page in seconds.
I hope you enjoy them.
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Wild Scotland from 2020VISION on Vimeo.
This web site is about the wildlife, particularly the mammals, of the Glen Affric National Nature Reserve area in the north west Highlands of Scotland, UK; and the equipment I use to search for them, which is chiefly trail cameras.
I provide a technical support and parts service for the Ltl Acorn range of cameras and the income from this provides for the upkeep of this site and the purchase of cameras for my own surveying.
I hope you find the site useful and informative; and please contact me if you have any questions that I haven't already covered.
I provide a technical support and parts service for the Ltl Acorn range of cameras and the income from this provides for the upkeep of this site and the purchase of cameras for my own surveying.
I hope you find the site useful and informative; and please contact me if you have any questions that I haven't already covered.



