We often hear the pheasant but rarely see him. This was a quiet day in camp when he ventured into the open, the took off when a car came.
This is the same shark as the other post. Still meandering near the shore, it clearly wasn't actively hunting. It ignored the school of mullet (arrow), and the mullet swam on by without seeing the shark as threat.
Krill attract fish. Fish attract sharks. This is the smaller of the two bronzies that were hanging around. A hammerhead was also seen in the area.
There were schools of parore around for several days. They appeared to be feeding on the last of the krill.
The seal had caught a parore and was repeatedly shaking, throwing and retrieving it, before finally eating it.
The red tide was mostly gone by the next day, but there were still krill in the water along the rocks, providing food for birds and fish.
This should bode well for a long hot summer, but not all trees were in early flower. So who knows what we will get?
|
AuthorThis page highlights one photo from each outing. The subjects will vary - it will be whatever caught my eye or was most special on that day. Categories |