I went for a walk.

Sunday morning and its a warm and slightly overcast I downed the last of my coffee. Grabbed the camera and decided to go for a walk. Over the last few weeks I have been using my Nikon D750 with the 50mm 1:8 G lens. A lens I don’t use very often. I was reading a piece on photography on the net, this photographer shoots mostly with a 35 and 50mm lens. So I thought I’ll give that a go but only with a 50mm lens (I don’t own a 35mm lens) and I decided I would shoot in Black and white. So I set the screen to show my images in B&W even though I shoot in raw. The captured image would still be in colour on the image files.

I live just outside the small village of Kinallen in County Down, Northern Ireland. I turn right right at the end of the road and begin the climb up hill into the village.

The walk up into Kinallen passes a few housing estates and this large farm house sitting among the trees across the road. The hill steepens as I approach the cross-roads.

There is also the local petrol/gas station which is also a small store. This is where I buy my lottery ticket from but I’ve discovered they only sell faulty one’s. Plus they won’t give refunds for them, but it’s a great little store for everyday goods with friendly workers.

Being Sunday morning the store is still closed, in fact I’m the only person about. I turn right onto the Banbridge Road. The only sound bar my heavy breathing after that hill is the birds singing, more pleasant on the ear.

I have seen this seat only when I have been driving, I crossed the road to photograph it and find out who it was dedicated to. I have no idea who she was or what caused her death since I only moved here a few years back. I’ll ask some of the ladies who work in the store whenever I’m back in there. A few hundred metres on and I turn right onto the Skeagh Road. It’s downhill here past the last houses in the village and back out into the countryside. During the week this can be a busy road plus its narrow and has no footpath/sidewalk. Its popular with walkers in the evening and weekends.

Its not telling me to slow down but drivers because there is a junction on the right just a short distance ahead.

Did you lose a cyclists water bottle ? There was a cycle race a couple of weeks back which finished at the top of the hill I just came down. I guess someone lighten the load before the sprint uphill to the finish line.

I turned onto Mayfield Avenue, here the road narrows close to being a single track road. Not much traffic on this road.

I did notice the road sign sat at the same angle as road, level with the road. great job lads…. no its not the way I held the camera. (note: must check this next time I’m over that way:) now where was I. Oh yes.

Just after turning into Mayfield Ave I spotted two poles supporting a garden fence. Let me show you.

We had a storm here a few months back, winds up to 120 MPH, It looks like they are waiting for the next one. Better hope it come from the same direction.

With the morning sun spotlighting parts of the road I met a lady walking a couple of dogs . We chatted for a few minutes, she declined to having her photo taken. So that’s why you get to see just the road.

In Ireland a tree that stands alone in a field is known as a fairy tree, it’s the entrance to middle earth and brings bad luck to any person that destroys it.

The cattle don’t seem to worry to much about it. It’s rare to see them still have horns, most get dehorned but I still would not like to be hit by one.

Its about now I get the smell of one of the country sides worst smells. Slurry spraying.

A true assault on the senses.

That’s the source, never a day off in the farming world. A dry day to get the fields sprayed. These guy’s fill this narrow road, glad I’m walking.

For any one from outside the UK or Ireland these roads are for two way traffic with a speed limit of 60 mph, yes that’s correct unless it is signed otherwise. Thought I would share that with you.

Ok not long to go now, hang in there and I’ll brighten the ending up for you. And we have Trespass laws here as most land is private.

No uninvited person please.

The Gate Lodge, A pretty stone build cottage which at some time would have been part of a large estate.

A short distance on and a runner with two dogs passes me, by the time I got the camera raised I saw his back disappear around the bend ahead.

Once pass this old farm building and climb the steep hill which starts here and goes on till the road ends. I have a short walk from there home. I hope you have enjoyed your walk in little part of Ireland. Thank you all for visiting and hopefully we will met again.

Some colour to finish, take care.

12 responses to “I went for a walk.”

  1. Janet Avatar

    Hi George! I had no idea that you had resumed work on your blog. I’m so sorry for not keeping up! I love the images and your narration. Enjoy your day and I’ll be catching up! -Janet

    Like

    1. George McNeill Avatar

      Hi Janet, yes trying to get back into blogging, still trying to get back to once a week but still slipping back. I get there.

      Thanks for the comment

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Penn,… Avatar

    Such a lovely walk, … and a very entertaining narration, … I enjoyed both, … it’s a shame about faulty lottery tickets, … I’ve decided not to buy any, anymore… and thank you for the photos of the lovely flowers at the end, … beautifully coloured, growing naturally as nature intended. 💫

    Liked by 1 person

  3. George McNeill Avatar

    Thank you, my story telling is on par with my luck on buying lottery tickets.

    The pink Wild Rose was called the dog rose where I grew up. The large daisy we call the Cow daisy, they grow on poor soil areas. The last white and pink flower is the Honeysuckle. After flowering the finger like blub that grew we would suck on these for their sweet taste.

    click on photos they should open full size.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Penn,… Avatar

      The top photos opened full size, George, …but the lower ones, …were stubbornly uncooperative, …even though I kept tapping with my stylus, …tsk! …mind you, gave me a chance to see them again, …💫

      Liked by 1 person

  4. George McNeill Avatar

    Hi Penn, I tried opening them on a tablet not belonging to me. They opened with a double tap.

    Try tapping the blog title first and seeing if it opens onto the blop post.

    Its a bit like reading the front page but the full story is inside the covers.

    Not a 100% sure that it will work but a friend who was travelling across Canada a few years back had a similar problem. That cured it for him.

    Thank you for trying and informing me.

    Like

  5. moragnoffke Avatar

    I love your description and your photography is gorgeous! It’s nice to get to know Ireland a bit. Thank you.

    Like

    1. George McNeill Avatar

      Welcome and thank you for the follow. I look forward to reading your content. I always have felt Scotland is my second home,a places I’ve visited many times.
      Thank you.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. moragnoffke Avatar

        You are welcome.

        Like

  6. AM Roselli Avatar

    Hi George, always wonderful knowing you and your camera are out there in the world capturing the beautiful moments

    Like

    1. George McNeill Avatar

      Hello AM, it’s good to see you back posting, I loved your sculpture’s. Thank you for your comment.

      Hope all is well with you. Take care AM.☘️

      Liked by 1 person

      1. AM Roselli Avatar

        Okay over here George 🙂 (excluding the current insane US gov)

        Like

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52 week Black and White

Week 11

Continuing this week with another Irish photo rally point. This one is just a couple of mile from my home. The Dromara Destroyers roadracers. Here in Ireland a lot off motorcycle racing is done on public roads that are closed to the public for the days racing. The four that made up The Dromara Destroyers are Brian Reid, Ray McCullough, Trevor Steele and Ian McGregar. I grew up watching this racers through the1960’s, 1970’s and into the 1990’s.

I grew on one of the oldest road racing courses in Ireland, the Temple 100. I include a YouTube link

So back to the Dromara Destroyers garden in the village of Dromara, County Down, Northern Ireland.

Temple 100 road race.

These are just four of the many racers that gave us some great racing here in Ireland. I take my hat off to all of them, the ones that are still racing, the ones retired and those that died too young.

This week one of the biggest road races in the world is happing, The Isle of man TT. Yesterday a local racer lost his life competing on the island.

Davy Morgan R. I. P, and deepest sympathy to his family and friends.

Thank you for dropping by.

George☘️

Black & White Wednesday

Welcome to another B & W Wednesday, hope all is well in you in your part of the world. The norm of this post is a single photograph. I will be posting a few images if they are related to the day and place they where photographed.

So the location is in the Dromara hills close to my home. The morning was heavy fog but around 11.30 am the sun was burning it off and opening the views to that layered effect.

This was taken has I climbed up through Drumkerragh forest has the fog was thinning.

With the fog clearing quickly has I walked higher up into the forest the sound of crows and ravens filled the valley with there calls. Pairs flying from tree top to tree top it gave me a chance to get a few nice images. This one below is off a couple of Ravens on a dead tree.

Raven ( Corvus corax) is a member of the crow family.

https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/raven/

In spring if you ever get the chance to watch Ravens do their courting flight, please watch them. They love to fly and at times you might think they have a death wish has they race towards the earth.

Here’s a link to a short Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rFKcj9aN7ZI

My next encounter was a small bird of prey, a Kestrel. I saw it sitting on a tree top and slowly made my way towards it. I lost sight of it and then has I rounded a group of trees there she sat. I got a few images has she sat looking around her but a bunch of twigs was spoiling them. Then she took off and came my way drifting on the breeze looking for prey. Nearly above me she started to hover and that’s when I got the following image.

Female Kestrel.

Kestrel ( Falco tinnunculus ) belongs to the falcon family of birds.

Kestrel:https://www.woodlandtrust.org.uk/trees-woods-and-wildlife/animals/birds/kestrel/

These are another fun bird to watch has they hover in the sky looking for small prey on the ground, when spotted the drop at great speed onto there prey.

Kestrel hovering, this is a great slow motion film. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c0D-J0cgJME

Kestrel hovering and the dive in real time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LaRSihpIU34

Hope you enjoyed a little part of my morning walk and a few of the wildlife we have here in Northern Ireland.

Take care and stay safe.

George.

Lockdown wildlife.

First I hope you are all keeping well and safe where ever you are in the world. Here in the north of Ireland we are back in a four week lockdown but we can still go out to exercise. So when the weather allows I pack the camera and head for the coast. I’m lucky that I have some great mud flats where the sea birds and wading birds feed within a 30 – 40 minutes drive. So the following photographs have been taken over the last few weeks along the County Down coast. Most of them have been shot with a Nikon D750 camera fitted with the Sigma 150 – 600 mm telephoto lens, some handheld and others using a tripod fitted with a gimble head. The following link is a great site for bird information here in Ireland and the UK. https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/wildlife-guides/bird-a-z/curlew/

The above is the Curlew ( Numenius arquata) taking off , great fun to watch has they sprint up to take off speed.

Here we see the Oystercatcher (Haematopus ostralegus) it’s a very distinctive bird with it’s bold black and white plumage, orange beak and legs but most of all that blood red eye.

Next the Brent goose ( Branta bernicla) This small goose  is similar in size to a mallard duck. Can be hard to get good photographs with the eye showing because of the dark coloured neck and head. With the setting sun behind me it was just right this evening. They are always in a flock and the on singled out here is seen drinking.

The Snipe(Gallinago gallinago) this is a bird that is getting rare to see here, it’s numbers have declined over the years. When I was a kid at school ( a long time ago) these where common and seen over most marshes daily. I was surprised to see two of them together. The Brent geese disturbed them and these one flew closer to me and nested down into the seaweed.

The Redshank (Tringa totanus) gets it’s name from it’s most distinctive features, their bright orange-red legs. I find these are one of our most common birds along this part of the coast. They can be found in large flocks or today just a few feeding on the incoming tide.

The next photographs where taken from my van when I saw this Kestrel just for the road side. I pulled over and shot a few frames before it moved off.

Kestrel (Falco tinnunculus) these are a small falcon and are often seen as here along the road sides hovering looking for small prey.

The colour is a little weak in these photographs of the Kestrel with the bright sky behind them but since they were part of the coast outings I included them.

Thank you for visiting and I’ll leave you with a image of Portaferry across Strangford lough.

Brent geese with Portaferry in the back ground and Windmill hill on the right.

George.

Black & White Wednesday

Had a few days break from work and was happy the sun decided to shine those few days. So I spent one of them at a few spots along the County Down coast. The tide was out and I was not counting on much wildlife on the mudflats. But the day left me with some grand photographs. So todays image is one of a Little Egret (Egretta garzetta) fishing in a fresh water stream that runs out through the mudflats.

Little Egret: Egretta garzetta

So it turned out a enjoyable day and may you all enjoy your day.

George.

Camera: Nikon D750 with a Sigma 150-600 mm lens

Data: f/6.3 @ 1/2000 sec: ISO 360, focal length 600 mm

Black & White Wednesday

Going for gunpowder, another photograph from Castle Espie. On the way through the woods we passed the old gunpowder store. nothing would do but a look insider. Not sure if he found any and there was nothing on the evening news. So all good.

The gunpowder store Castle Espie.

I normally post one photograph each week on B & W Wednesday but this week I am posting another from Castle Espie. A view across Strangford lough to Scrabo Tower. I meant to post this with another view across Strangford lough I posted a few weeks back.

Looking across Strangford lough to Scrabo Hill.

Some info below:

https://www.wwt.org.uk/wetland-centres/castle-espie

http://celtandkiwi.com/scrabo/

Thank you for dropping by.

George.

Black & White Wednesday

This weeks photograph comes from Castle Espie on the shore for Strangford lough County down. It is part of the Wildfowl & Wetlands Trust . Link below. After doing the wildfowl area it was into the Secret Swamp were my grandson informed me it’s where the swamp monsters live. So with a few near misses we make it through pass the wishing tree and into the woodland play ground. Along death defying log walks and through pipe tunnels into the safety of the walled fort, only the brave make it. I don’t think I would have made on my own….

The pipe tunnel where no man with a camera should go, only the little folk..

Castle Espie and WWT link: https://www.wwt.org.uk/wetland-centres/castle-espie#

Nikon D7200 with a Sigma 17-70 mm lens

Data: focal length 17 mm, f5 @ 1/60 sec ,ISO 500

Edited in Lightroom and finished in Nik Silver Efex Pro 2.

Thank you for visiting,

George.

Black & White Wednesday

This weeks black & white image was taken on the shore of Strangford Lough in County Down in Northern Ireland. The photograph shows a Black Headed gull drinking from a small river that flows into the lough. The gull is in its summer plumage where the head is a dark brown to black colour with a white ring around part of the eye.

Black headed gull, summer plumage. ( Chroicocephalus ridibundus)

Camera: Nikon D7200

Lens: Sigma 150 – 600 mm telephoto lens

metadata: f 7.1 at 1/800 sec: ISO 250

edited in Lightroom and finished in Nik Silver efex pro 2

Thank you for visiting and please comment.

George..

Black & White Wednesday

Welcome to another B&W Wednesday, the photograph this week of a Cabbage White butterfly. It was taken with a 150-600 mm telephoto lens. Using a telephoto lens allows you to stand well back from your subject, less chance of spooking them.

Shot in raw format and edited in LR with the final edit in Nik Silver Efex Pro.

Photographed using a Nikon D7200,

Sigma 150-600 mm lens.

ISO: 400, f8 , 1/800 sec. Lens focal length 550 mm.

Thank you for visiting and stay safe.

George.