




still going for the perfect swift shot mainly because there is not much else around my patch to aim at at present; getting a bird in an interesting pose or actually feeding is pot luck as they flash past and getting one sharp is rare! reading a Dutch Birding article on their first Pallid Swift I noticed it mentioned pale greater underwing coverts as a feature of Pallid v dark on Common Swift a feature which these shots seem to refute?
No comments:
Post a Comment