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This dazzling picture of a kingfisher was taken on a river in southwest England, close to where Charlie lives.
He has been passionate about kingfishers since he was a teenager, and as with all his photography, he tries to devise new ways to present familiar scenes and subjects. To create this image took two days and a lot of prior experimentation. Charlie lit the kingfisher's flight path artificially, while simultaneously creating a shadow on the bank to highlight the colourful trajectory. Firing two strobes at the end of the exposure caught the detail of the head and wings. The result is a vivid scene, showing not only the kingfisher taking a fish to its young in their nest hole but also the family's riverine territory. The other parent is on a perch downstream, busy digging a new nest for a second brood.
The Museum is a charity and we need your help. This year we have lost vital income.
If you could help us with a donation, no matter the size, we'd greatly appreciate it. Thank you.
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Charlie is a wildlife and conservation photojournalist for National Geographic. He specialises in subjects from eastern Africa and the Amazon.
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