Moving the woodpile has certainly bought out a change in the Wrens behavior pattern or it may be the courting. Still...I cannot see them long enough for a photograph..so you have done very well to get a sequence. Maybe I will also use Adrian's method.
Angie, these are as good as ever. My Wren, small as it is can spot a lens at twenty feet.
ReplyDeleteSmashing shots,difficult to capture.
ReplyDeleteWell done.
John.
Tiny, but beautiful! How can someone so small have so much life? Greetings!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful Wren shots Angie. They don't come any better than that.
ReplyDeleteNice shooting Angie. He/she obviously wants some company.
ReplyDeleteCracking shots Angie.
ReplyDeleteThank you Adrian, John, Atanasio, Roy, Frank & Keith. It's not company he/she wants Frank, it's my Mealworms!
ReplyDeleteThat Wren is quite a posser, great shots Angie
ReplyDeleteStunning shots of the wren and the previous posts are excellent.
ReplyDeleteWow fantastic post Angie!!! You got it, congrats!!! Not so easy to get!
ReplyDeleteAngie these are grand, was thinking a dab of super glue might assist my endeavours with the Wren.
ReplyDeleteMoving the woodpile has certainly bought out a change in the Wrens behavior pattern or it may be the courting. Still...I cannot see them long enough for a photograph..so you have done very well to get a sequence. Maybe I will also use Adrian's method.
ReplyDelete