
Some months ago I bought a ‘decent’ camera. Too late for the book, though! To my shame, so far I haven’t so much as glanced at the manual and have no idea what all the (dauntingly numerous) buttons do. This weekend was a chance to try and figure out how the darned thing works. We headed head out and around my local haunt, the Isle of Purbeck.
Basically, I failed. Among other stupidities, I have discovered since coming home that I’ve been taking every single photo at ISO 1600 (the sensitivity setting you select for pitch darkness) and that the Very Big Switch on the back of the camera does something completely different to what I thought it was doing. Oh well … better read that bloody manual, I guess.
Among other things, Heather and I sought out Purbeck’s auk population in an attempt to;
A] Get sunburned.
B] See if I could manage to take non-fuzzy photos with a 450mm zoom whilst rolling on a swell in a dark cave (the answer was “No”).
Although guillemots were there in abundance crowding the cliffs, we found just a solitary young puffin occupying their usual ledge; the remainder of this small colony were spotted out at sea fishing, one of them with a mouth full of fish.
Postscript: This evening I did a short MTB ride up the hill behind my house, Swyre Head. This hill overlooks the coast from the Isle of Wight to Portland Bill and tonight the air was exceptionally clear, with barely a ruffle to be seen out on the sea. I pedalled past deer, fox cubs, pheasant, partridge, hares, horses and a couple of donkeys. During the week I had a job interview in Penrith (up north where the Eskimos live) but for various reasons, decided not to attend it. I have worried all week over whether this was the right decision. I’m not worrying now.





All good.































You did better than us Mark, we went to find the puffins on Saturday and couldn’t see any.
No doubt a great weekend to be in the Purbecks, good decision mate!
jg
We get puffins up here too (where eskimos live)- we saw dozens of the little blghters this weekend whilst paddling around the sea caves at Flamborough Head.
100 years ago there were two hundred and fifty thousand pairs of puffins on Alisa Craig in the Clyde but rats off a shipwreck exterminated them. Over the last decade the rats were poisoned by conservationists and amazingly the puffins have returned. In 2006 we saw five at their traditional burrow site. Exactly two years later we saw so many hundreds that we could’t begin to count them.
http://bp2.blogger.com/_YDeW6uBEz2o/SB-EXJBRNyI/AAAAAAAADBM/jX6l-dESs0Q/s1600-h/080505IMG_2127.jpg
ASA 1600 eh? Wouldn’t catch me falling for that one…. Errrr…
http://seakayakphoto.blogspot.com/2008/05/wee-trip-to-garvellachs.html
Glad to hear that their numbers are increasing in one place, at least. Hoping to pass by Ailsa Craig this summer, although it’ll be too late for the puffins!
Mark R