Tagged: Birders

I decided to make a long overdue visit to Wakkerstroom on my way to a wedding in Sodwana Bay to visit friends and birders Sandy and Kevin. They escaped the bustle of the city in 2009 and bought a home a stones throw from the wetland.  I can now understand why it’s is such a popular destination, especially for birders.

I only had half a day and a night at early Autumn (April) to explore, yet I had some good bird sightings (photographically though too far for any award winning bird shots). One needs a week or long weekend with the usual amounts of patience with a side order of…time. However scenery and travel style images also await your camera as you will see in the slide show.

Lying in a unique grassland Biome; the source of the Vaal, Usuthu, Phongolo and Thukela rivers and surrounded by the Versamel Mountains the valley village of Wakkerstroom is a must see destination when exploring South Africa. In isiZulu, the river that passes close to town is known as Uthaka (Utaga), which roughly translates into a wide-awake (Wakker) river (Stroom) or  lively stream.

There are also numerous historical sites and as always in towns throughout South Africa a number of beautiful churches, the oldest, St Marks – Anglican dating back to 1880. There are also Catholic, Lutheran and an NG Kerk to explore or worship in on a Sunday. There is much to see and do; Arts and Crafts, biking, hiking, bushmen art, a 1938 SAR Class 19D No 2690 Borsig steam locomotive, Opikopi Museum. Ossewakop & Scotch Hill which may have inspired Sir Ryder Haggard who sometimes stayed in Wakkerstroom in the 1870’s to write about two enormous lava-covered volcanic mountains, called Sheba’s Breasts, in his novel, King Solomon’s Mines. A Roller mill, which dates back to 1904 is the only one of its kind still in operation.

Wakkerstroom is indeed a hidden gem and whilst this was a quick recce for future workshops, I immediately fell in love with it. The Wakkerstroom Country Inn serves a killer lunch / dinner and the numerous bistro’s, cheese factory and craft shops are also a must visit for their healthy fare, bric-a-brac, antiques and owners with heart warming stories and genuine love of the area. Townsfolk are friendly and real characters. There is also an annual classic music festival in March. A beautiful town steeped in history, period buildings, wetlands and the vistas of surrounding hills are to die for. If you have a few bob buy a hideout here and visit as often as you can.

I can arrange a photo workshop with self catering cottage, B&B or fully catered for between 4-6 budding photographers (spouses welcome).

Get a quote / Book a workshop here.

The area conjures up sightings of many of Southern Africa’s endemic birds as well as migrants, pristine wetlands, perfect hides, beautiful hikes, fishing and fine dining.

According to SA Birding:

The Wakkerstroom/Amersfoort area is famous among birders as the easiest area to find three highly endemic species restricted to South Africa’s high altitude grasslands – Rudd’s Lark, Botha’s Lark and Yellow-breasted Pipit. A total of 13 bird species are endemic or nearly so to South Africa’s Grassland Biome and nine of these, including Rudd’s Lark, Botha’s Lark and Yellow-breasted Pipit, plus Southern Bald Ibis, Blue Korhaan, Eastern Long-billed Lark, Sentinel Rock-Thrush, Buff-streaked Chat and Drakensberg Prinia can easily be found here during a full day’s birding in summer. A second day could yield forest endemics such as Bush Blackcap and Chorister Robin-Chat. Add to these another 33 southern African endemics or near-endemics and it is easy to see why the area is a magnet for foreign as well as South African birders. Habitats range from open grassland to mist belt forest, gorges and cliffs, with extensive wetland habitat in the form of vleis, pans and dams.

Thank you Sandy and Kevin for putting up with us Joburgers and making us feel at home. We’ll be back in the summer! Sandy is a keen birder and photographer. Her bird book collection could fill a library and her images not only of the birds but of the area are unhurried, natural and breathtakingly beautiful:

Autumn Sunrise Southern Hemisphere © Sandy McKenna 2012

Wakkerstroom – Official Web Site

Wakkerstroom Bird Club – Facebook Page

Wakkerstroom Ama Click Click Photo Club – Facebook Page

BirdLife South Africa Wakkerstroom Tourism and Education Centre – Facebook Page

Birdlife South Africa Wakkerstroom Tourism Centre – Web Site

Directions from Midrand, Gauteng about 3 hours.


View Midrand to Wakkerstroom Wetland NR, Wakkerstroom 2480, South Africa in a larger map

Gear I use: Bodies: Nikon D-SLR’s / Lenses: Nikon, Sigma, Tokina, Vivitar
Filters: Hoya UV & Polarizing / Flash: Nikon Speed-lights / Bag: Lowe Pro
Tripods & Heads: Manfrotto / Grips, Triggers, Timers, Batteries etc: BandH
Editing Plug-in: Topaz Labs Noise Reduction, HDR, B&W Conversion & more!

ALL IMAGES ON THIS SITE ARE © Harvey Grohmann. Read more for Terms and Conditions:
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Extremely elusive, here is the female nest building. Photographed in KZN near Assegay / Hillcrest. (Note: No feeders used to attract the birds!)

Amethyst Sunbird (f) © Harvey Grohmann 2013 All Rights Reserved

Amethyst Sunbird (f) © Harvey Grohmann 2013 All Rights Reserved

Shot details: Nikon D7000 and Sigma 100-300mm F/4.0 EX IF HSM.
In the shade so centre weighted average metering.
ISO-1600 f/5.0 and 1/1250s. Cropped 50%. Curves, Brightness, Topaz Labs DeNoise 5.

Contact me for tuition, workshops, photo tours and event photography.

Gear I use: Bodies: Nikon D-SLR’s / Lenses: Nikon, Sigma, Tokina, Vivitar
Filters: Hoya UV & Polarizing / Flash: Nikon Speed-lights / Bag: Lowe Pro
Tripods & Heads: Manfrotto / Grips, Triggers, Timers, Batteries etc: BandH
Editing Plug-in: Topaz Labs Noise Reduction, HDR, B&W Conversion & more!

ALL IMAGES ON THIS SITE ARE © Harvey Grohmann. Read more for Terms and Conditions:
(more…)

Extremely elusive, I tracked the mating pair around for a week till I got some usable images. Wild Bird photography is not for the easily disheartened! Photographed in KZN near Assegay / Hillcrest. (Note: No feeders used to attract the birds!)

Amethyst Sunbird (M) on Honeysuckle © Harvey Grohmann 2013 All Rights Reserved

Amethyst Sunbird (m) on Honeysuckle © Harvey Grohmann 2013 All Rights Reserved

Shot details: Nikon D7000 and Sigma 100-300mm F/4.0 EX IF HSM.
In the shade so centre weighted average metering.
ISO-1600 f/6.3 and 1/800s on Tripod. Cropped 50%. Curves, Topaz Labs DeNoise 5.

This male Amethyst Sunbird is extremely tiny and very elusive (in the wild) and due his predominantly black feathers, stays out of the sunlight like the plague making accurate overall exposure WITH feather detail very challenging. After spotting them I tracked the mating pair around for a week till I got some usable images. I will add the female next week :)

I prefer to portray an animals environment with the shot as this provides scale and interest. They are so small that even with a telephoto (my 300/450mm or my 500/750mm) I have to be within a few (2) meters to get them occupying 50% of the frame. This male would not let me get closer than about 5 meters. One of the reasons why I recently acquired a near new D7000 which has 30% more pixels and a higher pixel density per mm² than my D90/D300s. Naturally the 1.5x crop factor when using full frame glass helps too.

Whilst it is all to easy to attract then with sugar water feeders I do not like the hand of man in my wildlife images. No feeders or other tricks used to attract my birds.

This is a lifer for me (1st sighting of this species) and I hope you enjoy my portrayal of him.

Contact me for tuition, workshops, photo tours and event photography.

Gear I use: Bodies: Nikon D-SLR’s / Lenses: Nikon, Sigma, Tokina, Vivitar
Filters: Hoya UV & Polarizing / Flash: Nikon Speed-lights / Bag: Lowe Pro
Tripods & Heads: Manfrotto / Grips, Triggers, Timers, Batteries etc: BandH
Editing Plug-in: Topaz Labs Noise Reduction, HDR, B&W Conversion & more!

ALL IMAGES ON THIS SITE ARE © Harvey Grohmann. Read more for Terms and Conditions:
(more…)

The yellow what-sit with stripy eye. Excuse the quality!

Actually any wildlife tog should have a mental code of practice…

I’m the first to admit that I am not the world’s biggest twitcher. I battle to identify many of the obscure lesser seen species, especially those darned LBJ’s (how many do we have?!) and Eagles perched in a tree 400m away or soaring in the sky… I don’t race around the countryside looking for that elusive species. I don’t make use of playback vocalisations to call them in. I go. I see what I see. I’m happy to be out there, no just so that I can tick it. I carry a few bibles with me and I always ask someone who knows better than I especially the bloke with the monster prime lens :) Mind you, I’ve spoken to some who couldn’t tell the difference between a Heron and a Hadeda but they had all the latest gear and best glass, bodies…and bank manager!

My friend David from Seokama can identify LBJ’s and others from their calls without even setting eye on them. The yellow what-sit pictured (L) was hastily photographed there out the car window before it took off.  Terribly handy to have Dave on my workshops with me :)

I do try to be as unobtrusive and non-invasive as possible. I often miss shots because of this. Or I’ll let someone else push his way into the hide before me to race off and grab the best seat…even though he and his entire family arrived after me…I know that, by them being the impatient kind & pushing me out of the way, if they don’t at least see 14 elephants at the hide followed by a Leopard and her cub with a kill in a tree, they’ll be outta there before I even set up my gear…aaah peace :)

The last time this happened to my wife and I (Lake Panic, KNP), she spotted 2x and I spotted 1x Bushbuck right next to the hide alley. We stood silently and let the noisy Homo Sapiens pass us, and then resumed watching the buck feeding… The previous time it was at a hide near Satara, and 2x Klipspringer were so close to the viewing window we could touch them, but half a dozen holiday makers came and went in 5 minutes without even spotting them. The rest of us were going to mention it to them but they never gave us a chance :)

/end Rant

Once in the hide, I did get some great shots of a croc eye abstract and a terrapin taking a piggy back ride on a hippo and the Klipspringers. The birds were a bit shy but we did see a few. A bad day in a hide beats a good day at the studio.

Here’s a few tips (saves me typing them) from BirdGuide.com and most of this is common sense, but even that’s not so common any more :(

Be patient and be thoughtful of nature first and others second. Your photo album will love you for it! So will the critters. So will I when we share a hide in Africa somewhere :) Take a plastic bag for your own rubbish. I’ve often cleaned up others rubbish and tossed it at the camp or the next stopover.

PS: So what bird IS that above? PPS: What tree IS it sitting in? :) I know, do you?

John James Audobon. Image from Wikipedia.

Today marks the birthday of John James Audubon (Jean-Jacques Audubon) (April 26, 1785 – January 27, 1851) who was a French-American ornithologist, naturalist, hunter, and painter. He painted, catalogued, and described the birds of North America. For those who photograph birds or are just “Twitchers”, go look him up here. Amazing life and artwork of birds.