I'm just back from Amsterdam shooting a new project on city herons. With all of the canals and waterways, grey herons really thrive over there, but I managed to find an area where they are part of the night-life too. Look out for the full series, which I'll be publishing soon.
WILDLIFE
WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR BLOG CONTRIBUTION
The "Urban" category is making a comeback in the 2015 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition. To celebrate this, the organisers asked myself and two awesome wildlife photographers - Alex Badyaev and Pål Hermansen, to share our thoughts about urban wildlife. I am a big believer that wildlife should not be seen as something that exists outside of the city and that urban wildlife photography plays a big part in helping people realise that humans and wildlife must coexist. The piece can be found on the Natural History Museum Wildlife Photographer of the Year site here..
URBAN WILDLIFE - THE QUIET SPECTACLE OF THE COMMONPLACE
ROOTS MAGAZINE FRONT COVER
Dutch nature magazine Roots has used one of my urban fox images for their February cover. Inside there is a cool feature on urban wildlife with some more of my pictures, including 2 double page spreads of the same fox and an urban peregrine falcon. I've long been a fan of Roots - it's the biggest independent wildlife and nature mag in the Netherlands and always contains great photography, so it's great to make the cover and exciting to see my local wildlife getting international attention!
BBC WILDLIFE FEB 2015 - HOW TO PHOTOGRAPH URBAN WILDLIFE
If you want to know how to photograph urban wildlife, check out the new Feb 2015 issue of BBC Wildlife Magazine. My best tips and advice about photographing UK wildlife in the city are condensed into a double page "how to" tutorial - Available today http://www.discoverwildlife.com/magazine/current-issue
NATURE'S IMAGES AWARDS 2014
The results of the 2014 Melvita Nature's Images Awards have just been announced this morning and my recently published Berlin goshawk story and one of my urban fox pictures have both been awarded. The goshawk set (12 images) was a runner-up in the Man and Nature category and my fox in the Nature in the City category. A nice way to finish off 2014 and my best year so far in the major wildlife photography competitions with a total of 21 awarded images.
You can see all of the winners and runners-up on the competition website: www.natureimagesawards.com/palmares-2014
In unrelated news, my parakeet image has been included in the Daily Mail's "Most Amazing Photographs of 2014". View the full selection here.
BBC WILDLIFE MAGAZINE - URBAN GOSHAWK FEATURE PUBLISHED
The latest issue of BBC Wildlife Magazine (January 2015) hits the shelves on Monday and I'm excited to share that it's running my Berlin goshawk story. I've been working on this for some time now and it's been a bit of a journey from my first trip out to find them at the beginning of 2013. I've met lots of people working with goshawks and raptors along the way and some have become close friends. I took Ben Hoare, the features editor of Wildlife Mag out to Berlin with me this Summer to meet some of them, so that he could find out a bit more about the project and interview the people working with and monitoring the goshawks before writing the feature. 2015 is the "year of the Goshawk" in Germany, so it's a great time for it to be published and Ben has done a great job in telling the full story. Subscribers to the mag should have their copies already, but it officially goes on sale on Monday 22nd December so please go and check it out.
You can see more of my pictures from this project on my site: www.samhobson.co.uk/urban-goshawk
A web gallery is also being featured on the BBC Discover Wildlife Site: www.discoverwildlife.com/gallery/goshawks-berlin
The behind the scenes video on the Wildlife Mag Youtube Channel is here: http://youtu.be/d2tboE0fePw
Massive thanks to Norbert, Bea, Rainer, Olly, Manuela, Lutz, Felix and all the guys who helped me get the pictures and made it so much fun and big thanks to everyone at Wildlife Mag for making it happen!
BBC WILDLIFE MAG EDITOR NAMES PARAKEETS PICTURE OF THE YEAR
A feature in the current "Christmas Special" issue of Amateur Photographer Magazine asks 10 magazine, agency and website editors to select their favourite image from 2014. Matt Swaine, editor of BBC Wildlife Magazine has picked my WPY and GDT EWPY awarded image of parakeets as his favourite of the year and here's what he says about it.. Thanks Matt!
Matt Swaine - Editor of BBC Wildlife Magazine
Rose-ringed Parakeets Flying Over a London Cemetery by Sam Hobson
I would like to nominate Sam Hobson’s picture, which was a finalist in the 2014 Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition. Sam specialises in urban wildlife and works hard to understand animal behaviour to get the right image. I believe this shot was taken in a graveyard in South London and it shows rose-ringed parakeets – an alien species that is now becoming quite commonplace on garden feeders in this part of the UK. Invasive species are a serious issue, and this photo shows these birds in a clearly British setting, bringing home just how commonplace they have become.
UPDATE - 20th December 2014 - Parakeets also included in Daily Mail Most Amazing Pictures of 2014
Amateur Photographer Magazine - 20-27 December 2014 - Images of the Year
A MOMENT WITH NATURE - OUTDOOR PHOTOGRAPHY MAGAZINE
This month's Outdoor Photography Magazine features a piece about the wild raven I photographed earlier this year in the Canary Islands. The locals knew him as "Geronimo" and to say he was a character would be a real understatement. Copy attached below..
On a visit to the Canary Islands to photograph ground squirrels, Sam Hobson finds the star of the show is an impressive wild raven, called Geronimo, with a penchant for biscuits and peanuts thrown by passing tourists. It took quite an effort to get this epic shot
"Earlier this year, I went to Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands to research a few conservation projects and shoot a photo story on the invasive Barbary ground squirrels that have colonised the island. I quickly found the squirrels, as they gather anywhere there are tourists, and I decided to use this to my advantage by shooting them in context with some nice palm-tree-lined promenades and beachside resorts in the background. After I’d got the more urban images, I headed out on the tourist trail; up into the mountains to search for locations where I could photograph the squirrels in front of the island’s typically arid landscapes. After studying the map, I chose the road with the most lookout points dotted along it. I’d heard about a few cool birds I might encounter on the way, such as houbara bustards, cream-coloured coursers and Egyptian vultures, so I was keeping my eyes peeled, but nearly everywhere we stopped there were ravens, either cronking in the sky above or perched only a stone’s throw away upon roadside fence posts. I’d never encountered wild ravens as bold as these – they seemed to be taking up the role of gulls or crows, which were notably lacking on the island, and were scavenging for pickings around the outskirts of towns and villages. We drove higher into the mountains and when we reached the first of the lookouts, it was a wildlife oasis. Barbary squirrels, or ‘chipmunks’, as tourists call them, were coming out of the woodwork, sparrows were hopping all around my feet and within a few minutes a pair of ravens had landed nearby. It soon became obvious why the wildlife here was so habituated and concentrated, as a tour bus pulled up and its passengers got out with various tidbits to feed the squirrels and birds. A little perplexingly to me at first, the bus driver started shouting ‘Geronimo! Geronimo!’ We soon spotted a massive raven flying up through the valley towards us, straight over the bus and landing on a post very near the driver. The other ravens and squirrels scattered and Geronimo quickly hoovered up all the biscuits and peanuts he could before taking off into the valley, leaving the tourists to continue on their journey. Over the next few days, I returned to that viewpoint to see Geronimo a number of times. After a while, he started to recognise me and became a bit more comfortable with my camera and flash. I set up this shot by placing a piece of flapjack on my lens hood, using a bit of fill-flash and standing back a few feet with a remote release to fire the shutter. Unfortunately, the only perches available were either fences or ugly looking concrete, so I had to lug the rock he’s standing on about half a kilometre to the scene, but it was definitely worth the effort. I wanted to capture some of his character so it was important to get him big in the frame, and by using a wideangle lens I could get as much of the valley behind him in as possible – I definitely think he comes across as king of the castle. Shouting ‘Geronimo’ into a valley and watching a majestic wild raven fly from the distant horizon towards me and landing by my side is a wildlife experience I’ll never forget."
Nikon D800, Nikon 17-35mm f2.8, SB700, Pocket Wizard +III
Outdoor Photography magazine, 185, Moment with Nature
BBC WILDLIFE COVER AND WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHER OF THE YEAR
Tuesday was definitely my biggest night of the year. First of all, it was Wildlife Photographer of the year week, which in itself was great to be a part of. The night of the awards was loads of fun and the standard this year is absolutely incredible. My parakeet image "Feral Spirits" was a finalist in the birds category so I got my first peek of it in the special 50th anniversary awards book and in the competition exhibition at the Natural History Museum. I also had a dream come true when I got to meet Sir David Attenborough and shake him by the hand. He's been a hero of mine ever since I can remember and has always been an inspiration in keeping my interest in natural history alive. What made the night even more special, was that I got to see my fox image on the cover of BBC Wildlife Magazine. The special WPY issue featuring all the winners is given out on the night with a copy of the WPY book, and the awards is the first time anybody sees it, so to have the front cover and of this particular issue totally blew me away. Finally, it was also announced that my parakeet image was highly commended in the GDT European Wildlife Photographer of the Year in the Man and Nature category. To say I'm on a high is quite an understatement!
BBC Wildlife magazine are currently running a gallery of my fox pictures including the cover: www.discoverwildlife.com/gallery/amazing-urban-fox-photos
GOSHAWK PICTURES USED FOR BIRD OF YEAR CAMPAIGN 2015
It has just been announced that the goshawk (der habicht) will be pronounced "Bird of the Year" for 2015 in Germany. I have been out to Berlin a number of times to photograph the urban population of goshawks, so I'm pleased that NABU will be using my pictures for their campaign. It's really great to see this often persecuted bird of prey being championed and and brought into public awareness. They are using one of my images for the poster and you can also download a brochure with loads of information (in German) and some of mine and my friends pictures here: http://www.nabu.de/aktionenundprojekte/vogeldesjahres/2015-habicht/17210.html
PEREGRINE AND URBAN WILDLIFE PICTURES IN THE NEWS
My urban peregrines are featured on the BBC England site today: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-29381032
A nice mention for Ed's urban peregrine book which can be ordered here: http://www.pelagicpublishing.com/urban-peregrines.html
I also recently had a gallery in The Guardian dedicated to my photography: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/gallery/2014/sep/12/urban-wildlife-in-pictures
NEW URBAN FOX PROJECT
I've been working locally in Bristol recently on a new fox project, to get some new images together for my upcoming talk at Wildscreen Photography Festival. The beauty of working locally is that it means I can visit a site regularly and be a bit more creative with my lighting and set up. I've been working with a local family of foxes that are all really individual characters, but my favourite to photograph by far is this little guy who is just so inquisitive and cheeky. I've tried to capture some of his personality in my pictures. You can see the full set here: www.samhobson.co.uk/urban-red-fox
Both shot on Nikon D800, Nikon 17-35mm f2.8, SB-800, SB-700, Pocket Wizard +IIIs
URBAN PEREGRINE SERIES AWARDED IN BRITISH WILDLIFE PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDS
A series of 6 pictures from my urban peregrine project has just been awarded in the documentary series category in this year's British Wildlife Photographer of the Year Awards. One of the images was also chosen for the invitation to the awards ceremony on Wednesday night.
My urban peregrine project has been my longest term UK project to date, so it's really nice to see them in the biggest UK wildlife photography competition.
DOVREFJELL - NORWAY - SNEAK PEEK
Just back from Norway on an epic mission to find and photograph the musk oxen in Dovrefjell. I'll just share a few pictures for now as I'll need to make some time to make a proper edit and write a more detailed trip report. Had a great week and learnt a lot about the musk ox and got some story ideas about arctic foxes too. The foxes pictured below are part of a reintroduction programme.. But more on that later hopefully :)
UPCOMING TALK AT WILDSCREEN PHOTOGRAPHY FESTIVAL
The Wildscreen Photography Festival (fka Wildphotos) speakers have been announced and I'm pretty excited to share that I'll be joining them this year to talk about urban wildlife photography. It's the biggest Wildlife Photography event of the year, which I've been going to regularly for the past 4 or 5 years, so I feel pretty honoured to be amongst the speakers this time. This year, it will be held over 3 days and there'll be loads of cool wildlife photography related workshops and talks. It's a great opportunity for chatting to others already working in the industry too so hope to see you there in October!
BBC WILDLIFE MAGAZINE DOUBLE PAGE OPENER
Really excited to see that BBC Wildlife Magazine have chosen my image of a Barbary ground squirrel as their opening double page spread in the new July issue. This image was made on a recent trip to Fuerteventura and although I've had my work published in Wildlife Mag before, to have the opener is a real priviledge!
Nikon D800, Nikon 17-35mm f2.8, SB700, Pocket Wizard +III
BBC URBAN GOSHAWK FEATURE UPDATE
Just been away for perhaps my last trip out to Berlin for a while to photograph urban goshawks. I went out there for the 4th time over 2 years last week to photograph my friend Norbert and his colleagues ringing nestlings. This time I took Ben Hoare, the features editor at BBC Wildlife Magazine to meet everyone and get involved. We had a great week sampling plenty of Berlin's bars and saw some great wildlife - not just goshawks, but urban wild boar too! Ben will be writing the feature and it should be published with my pictures later in the year.
The picture above is a frame from a timelapse sequence I set going on a camera attached to Norbert's head. Interesting to see things from his perspective!
SAINT LUCIA COMMISSION
UPDATE AUGUST 14th - FULL TRIP REPORT NOW UP
Just back from an amazing week in Saint Lucia. I was invited to photograph the birdlife on the island by Anse Chastenet eco resort. I'll post pictures as soon as they're processed, but here's one of my early favourites from the week :)
URBAN PEREGRINE FALCON PROJECT
A portfolio of my peregrines is currently up on the BBC Wildlife Magazine website, featuring some of the images I've been working on for the past 2 years, so I thought I'd take the opportunity to write a bit about the project.
My relationship with peregrine falcons has been a long one. I can't remember my very first encounter, but I remember becoming aware of them when I was studying wildlife photography at university in Blackpool. During the term, I'd occasionally see them on the church in the town centre or perched near the top of "The Big One" at Blackpool Pleasure Beach - the world's tallest rollercoaster at the time. Always at a distance, I wasn't sure that I'd ever be able to photograph them. I first witnessed one hunting on a field-trip to Heysham Bay, where 50,000 knot would roost at high tide. Without warning, a large falcon appeared out of the blue and piled into the roosting birds, causing pandemonium. The knot twisted and turned, splitting into aerial spheres of thousands of birds before coalescing into a tight mass, all the while with the peregrine stooping and chasing until it secured a victory. Another memorable encounter was when an adult bird smashed through one of the large double-glazed university windows - presumably unable to pull out of a high speed stoop after a local pigeon. It was a sad sight to see such an electrifying creature suddenly so still and lifeless, but as most of the scientific illustration course's models were getting a bit old and tatty, the college had it stuffed and it became immortalised in ink and paint.
During the Summers, I worked on a boat in South Devon that went on wildlife cruises from the Exe out in to Lyme Bay and the Jurassic Coast. We'd see peregrines nearly everyday and this is when I started to get my eye in, and learnt to quickly pick out their shape against a blue sky or a cliff face.
Since then, I have always looked out for them in likely spots and in any city that I visit, I watch the pigeons for the tell-tale behaviours that give away a patrolling peregrines's presence in the sky above.
But it wasn't until I moved to Bristol in 2010 that I got to know a particular pair of peregrines intimately, learning their daily habits and routines. I moved in to a flat in Clifton between the Wills Memorial Building and Cabot Tower, keeping my eye on the Wills Building as it looked perfect for a peregrine. It wasn't long before I was rewarded and I started to see them regularly - I could even hear the occasional screech, kak or ee-chup if I left my window open.
On a dark night in November 2011, I stepped out for a walk and could hear the male calling loudly. I'd heard about peregrines using city lights to hunt nocturnally, but I never thought I'd see it for myself. I rushed over to the base of the building and saw a bird in the sky, glowing in the tower's up-lights. It was the female with a kill. It was late, so the streets were quiet, which meant I could run about in the road like a mad-man to try and catch the plucked feathers as they fell. They'd caught a lapwing migrating under the cover of darkness - not a common bird to see in the middle of the city. I was totally blown away.
After this encounter, I started to get interested in the urban peregrines' diet - they could show us exactly what unusual birds were flying over our heads while we were tucked up in bed. I began monitoring the Clifton pair and my other local pair in the city centre, and started to discover all kinds of curious goings-on. Whimbrels, woodcocks, cuckoo, golden plover, water rail, little grebe, dunlin, jack snipe, skylark and teal were all on the menu - and none of them city birds. You would think that peregrines living in the city would just prey upon the pigeons, but during some Winter months, pigeons were making up much less than a third of their diet. They were hunting nocturnal migrants almost exclusively. I guess why go after a street-savvy feral pigeon, that knows the city like the back of its wing, when you can pluck a tasty game-bird out of the sky? I realised Bristol was pretty well located for passage migrants - frozen ground or snow cover in the north would push them to the milder south-west.
My peregrine watching became a round-the-clock pursuit and I'd take any opportunity to stop in and see what I could find in the prey remains. Some times it would just be a feather or a foot, but occasionally after a storm, I'd find the peregrine's winter cache completely washed out. There'd be wings, legs, whole bodies and one time, even 3 whole woodcocks lying in the street in the centre of Bristol. It's pretty difficult to ID bird remains, even if they are whole - a lifeless lump taken out of context is surprisingly unfamiliar when you don't have behaviour and habitat to help. I asked a man well known for his peregrine studies - Ed Drewitt, for help and we became friends, brought together by a morbid fascination for bird bits. He taught me loads, and even though I am now able to identify most of what I find, I still have to go to him with the more unusual stuff. Ed has been studying urban peregrines for the last 15 years and has recently written a book about them, which will feature a lot about their diet and around 20 of my pictures, including this one on the cover - perhaps one of the best looking peregrines out there, the Bristol city centre tiercel.
As I spent more and more time learning about the peregrines' habits and behaviours, my pictures started to improve and I started to learn to predict when they would be active and where to be to best see and photograph them. Peregrines might be the fastest animal on the planet, but they can also be the slowest - particularly after a meal. You can literally wait 5 hours for 30 seconds of action, so learning to anticipate their behaviours has been pretty useful, if not for anything else than to save me getting cold and restless.
The picture above is a good example - it was a cold Winter's morning, after a period of rain during which this family's food cache had been lost, so I knew they were hungry. The solitary juvenile from that year's brood was still hanging around, begging and being tolerated and I knew the adult male had a sneaky half pigeon stashed away on a different building to their normal cache site. It was only a matter of waiting for him to sneak off and fetch it, which as soon as he did caused the other 2 to chase him until he gave it up - it might look like a food transfer, but in this case, that was the last thing on the tiercel's mind.
Below is an image of the same Bristol family - this juvenile male was always playing with his food, and here he's practicing flying whilst carrying the weight of a butchered pigeon. I like the way it shows his tail feathers spread open for extra lift and you can just make out his mother, keeping a watchful eye on him from the building behind.
Through working with peregrines, I've had the opportunity to meet and get to know others who share the same passion, which has led to some great photographic opportunities, including ringing the nestlings around Bristol and Bath, again with Ed Drewitt.
Probably my most memorable experience though, was watching the peregrines at Charing Cross Hospital being ringed. Urban peregrine falcon photography can be tricky as you're always looking up and it's sometimes difficult to get that urban context - a peregrine with a cityscape in the background is like the holy grail! Nathalie Mahieu, who monitors the family there gave me the chance to come along and take some pictures during the ringing. I was pretty excited, as we'd be up near the top of the hospital, looking out over a busy London skyline. That morning the sun had just started to peek through the clouds as we went up towards the roof to access the scrape and by the time we got up there, there was just enough light to get the shutter speeds I'd need to capture the birds in flight.
You never know how the parents will react when the chicks are being ringed. Sometimes they will just disappear, occasionally they will react at first, then settle down and watch from a distance - particularly if they have had their chicks ringed before, and sometimes they will remain vigilant and agitated - flying backwards and forwards, calling as they closely watch the proceedings.
After about 15 minutes the whole thing is over and it's as if nothing ever happened, but those 15 minutes can be pretty productive if you can hold your nerve and not panic when there's an adult peregrine falcon buzzing past just metres from your head.
I haven't quite finished with the peregrines and I still monitor my local pairs regularly, but now I'm mainly working on an urban goshawk project, that should be complete by the end of the Summer, so watch this space :)
You can see more from my urban peregrine project on my portfolio site.
Ed's book is out in May, and can be pre-ordered at the Natural History Book Store.
I'd like to thank fellow peregrine people - Ed Drewitt, Nathalie Mahieu, Terry Pickford, Stuart Harrington and Dave Morrison for their help and advice and fellow photographer Bertie G for keeping me on my toes with his many exclamations of "urban peregrine, comin' in hot!!!"..