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This is getting ridiculous
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<blockquote data-quote="Dry Rot" data-source="post: 8115635" data-attributes="member: 4505"><p>The pioneers of Nature photography were the Kearton brothers. <strong>Richard and Cherry Kearton</strong> were brothers from Thwaite, Swaledale, born in 1862 and 1871 respectively. They became famous as pioneers of wildlife photography with images of birds' eggs and nests, and developed solutions to the problems of such photography, especially the use of hides. Their books are well worth reading if just to become aware of how things have changed. In one of the books, they lament the spread of the new steam railways. It was predicted that the steam engines would disturb the sky larks, stop them breeding, and they'd become extinct.</p><p></p><p>In fact, wildlife is often extremely resilient and if a sky lark's nest is destroyed, it will probably lay another clutch in a more suitable place.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dry Rot, post: 8115635, member: 4505"] The pioneers of Nature photography were the Kearton brothers. [B]Richard and Cherry Kearton[/B] were brothers from Thwaite, Swaledale, born in 1862 and 1871 respectively. They became famous as pioneers of wildlife photography with images of birds' eggs and nests, and developed solutions to the problems of such photography, especially the use of hides. Their books are well worth reading if just to become aware of how things have changed. In one of the books, they lament the spread of the new steam railways. It was predicted that the steam engines would disturb the sky larks, stop them breeding, and they'd become extinct. In fact, wildlife is often extremely resilient and if a sky lark's nest is destroyed, it will probably lay another clutch in a more suitable place. [/QUOTE]
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This is getting ridiculous
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