The fences are meant to keep the sand in place and make them build up. As you can see it is working. The whimbrel is using this beautiful habitat.
On this murky day, the ducks were faint in the distance. Still I could capture them pretty sharply.
The heron was cleverly waiting for the water to come back in between the breakwaters. Just when the water was high enough, he started fishing from his vantage point.
The egret is stalking the swans. Or at least he is stalking by.
This image is from the same hike as yesterday's image: the large carp pond in the winter.
This time, peeping through the reeds I could bring the birds into the picture. Lots of ducks, but also gulls and other water birds.

Hunting birds is a hobby of mine.
While hunting them, they stay unharmed and don't even always notice me. These images were shot out of a car with a 500mm lens on my crop sensor camera. The resulting images are cropped in post, in addition. The distance to the bird explains some lack of clarity, that I have to admit.
But I guess, as you can tell, despite the distance: he did spot me and focussed on me.
Winter views over a lake. No snow, nothing frozen. But the swans and egrets in the shallow water towards the reeds in the back.
The day was gloomy and subdued. But the photographic conditions were actually really nice.
Yesterday we got to watch a wood pecker high up in the tree. With a tele lens you get a much better view of birds than with your naked eye. Just you need to spot them first to know where to direct and zoom that lens.
We did see a lot of eagles on Lofoten. And they are such a mighty sight!
This one here was just an exhibit. But I love how close I could get.
As I climb around on the scaffolding at roof bottom level, this little guy has found a perch at roof top level. It is a strange feeling to meet a bird in its habitat and to be climbing around close to it. It really did not seem to mind a lot. He almost landed next to us a few times that day or hung out at spots really close to us.
Even sea gulls stare into a sunset like this. Well, I do assume that it may have been staring at the water that was rushing in from the ocean to fill the bay of St Michel, waiting for fish.
We watched the tidal power plant in Saint Malo. It was a dream of me for a long while to go and see it. We had fun standing ontop of the dam and looking down into the sea side of the installation and watched the troubled waters as the plant began the process and let the water stream out.
The sea birds were really active at the time, since the waters seem to be ideal fishing grounds.
But what on earth has this bird caught here? We watched him drift around with it for a bit, finally landing it on a rock and digging in. The second gull got to share the meal.
The issue is obvious when you set up a monument for a hero near the sea shore. Then you watch the sea birds flock in. But how else would you celebrate a hero there?
This statue for the cormorant was sitting by the water side in Concarneau. It is not the first cormorant statue I have seen in fishing towns. Obviously people love this bird in many places.
The church towers in northern Brittany were very diverse and changing up in style. What was pretty common with them was the amount of ravens circeling them and landing on them.
The côte granit rose in Brittany is really toned red. Here you see some really pretty rocks with some birds on them.
This bird was fluttering along next to us for a little bit as we hiked along the côte granit rose, Brittany.
Here is a rooster that strides about the viking village of Haithabu, Schleswig Holstein.
This gull was looking at us with quite some style.
A mallard duck swooshing in for a landing - Lippeauen