I have had one ear open for the last couple of weeks ready to hear the first calls of the Cuckoo. On Saturday while wandering through the woods I gave a little gasp of delight as I heard the Cuckoo’s distinctive calls. It was a lovely sunshiny day and the Cuckoo called merrily away at some distance, never close and I wondered whether I would see it.
While playing in the woods a couple of fellas I was chatting to pointed out the Cuckoo as it flew past, but of course it was much too fast and through all those branches impossible to photograph.
At the end of the afternoon I was enjoying a lovely sit down in the sunshine, listening to the warblers and waiting for one or two to pop up out of the reeds whilst at the same time listening to the odd call from a Cuckoo, when a friend wandered by and stopped for a chat.
And as we chatted and waited for warblers he noticed at great distance a blob on the top of a dead tree and immediately said ‘that’s a Cuckoo’ I exclaimed with, ‘how do you even know at this distance!’. So I took a snap and blew it up and sure enough there were the distinctive bars on the breast of a Cuckoo. Wow, even double Wow as it is my first ever Cuckoo photograph.
The next day, gossip was rife with the boys at the nature reserve and they merrily ribbed me about my blob of a Cuckoo, even casting aspersions as to the calibre of my accomplice who had pointed it out… How I laughed, as I recognised the lightest twinge of envy that the newbie had snapped the first Cuckoo of the season.
My first Cuckoo, it was a thing of beauty. 



Loved up Greylags, the prettiest of all geese with their orange bills, pink legs and beautiful grey feathering.

A water Rail, that was a real treat as they are such secretive little birds. I’ve not upped the red, the beak really was that bright, it must be at the peak of being ready to breed.
A nice little Robin singing a happy song as we left one evening, I shot this with just a little fill in flash and its turned out pretty well – the Robin didn’t seem to mind at all.
The Lapwings were out for a spin. They are amazing to watch as one never knows which direction they will spin off into next, amazing acrobats and very hard to photograph.
A Grey Heron at last light taking a fish, I love the reflection in this.
And this is an action shot of a Grey Heron taking a Pike for his supper.
A Crested Grebe enjoying the sunshine and having a scratch.
A Little Egret shaking like a labrador, so cute!
And last but by no means least a Common Sandpiper, which are normally too far away to photograph properly, so I was very lucky when it landed on a much nearer island.