Short-toed Treecreeper — a quiet moment at the base of a tree
Some birds don’t announce themselves with color or sound. They whisper.
On the same morning walk through the Oisterwijkse Bossen, I noticed one of those whispers: a Short-toed Treecreeper — Certhia brachydactyla (Boomkruiper in Dutch).
Treecreepers are specialists. Their curved bills and stiff tail feathers are evolutionary tools designed for one task: spiraling up tree trunks while probing bark crevices for insects and spiders. This one was doing exactly that — hopping on and off the lower part of a trunk, pecking quickly, constantly alert. These birds are small, nervous, and very aware of their surroundings, which makes photographing them more about patience than speed.
I moved slowly, trying not to break the rhythm of its foraging. Early morning light was still scarce, and I was fully zoomed in with my Sigma 100–400mm on the Canon 5D Mark IV. That meant f/6.3, ISO 3200, and a shutter speed of 1/250s — about the slowest I’m comfortable with handheld while tracking a moving subject. Noise is a fair trade for sharpness and presence.
Then, unexpectedly, it paused. Just for a moment. Sitting on the ground at the base of the same tree it had been circling, staring ahead as if briefly lost in thought. No motion, no alarm. Just a pause.
That’s the frame that stayed with me. Not dramatic. Not rare in spectacle. But intimate. A small bird, perfectly adapted, taking a breath in a forest that barely noticed.
#ShortToedTreecreeper #CerthiaBrachydactyla #Boomkruiper
#BirdPhotography #ForestBirds #WildlifePhotography
#Canon5DMarkIV #Sigma100400 #HandheldPhotography
#LowLightPhotography #NatureObservation #AvianEcology
#BirdBehavior #WoodlandWildlife #DutchNature
#OisterwijkseBossen #SmallBirds #QuietMoments
#ScientificCuriosity #NatureDetails #FieldBiology
#PixelfedPhotography #NatureLovers #BirdWatchers
#ByMaikeldeBakker #WonderingLens
Some birds don’t announce themselves with color or sound. They whisper.
On the same morning walk through the Oisterwijkse Bossen, I noticed one of those whispers: a Short-toed Treecreeper — Certhia brachydactyla (Boomkruiper in Dutch).
Treecreepers are specialists. Their curved bills and stiff tail feathers are evolutionary tools designed for one task: spiraling up tree trunks while probing bark crevices for insects and spiders. This one was doing exactly that — hopping on and off the lower part of a trunk, pecking quickly, constantly alert. These birds are small, nervous, and very aware of their surroundings, which makes photographing them more about patience than speed.
I moved slowly, trying not to break the rhythm of its foraging. Early morning light was still scarce, and I was fully zoomed in with my Sigma 100–400mm on the Canon 5D Mark IV. That meant f/6.3, ISO 3200, and a shutter speed of 1/250s — about the slowest I’m comfortable with handheld while tracking a moving subject. Noise is a fair trade for sharpness and presence.
Then, unexpectedly, it paused. Just for a moment. Sitting on the ground at the base of the same tree it had been circling, staring ahead as if briefly lost in thought. No motion, no alarm. Just a pause.
That’s the frame that stayed with me. Not dramatic. Not rare in spectacle. But intimate. A small bird, perfectly adapted, taking a breath in a forest that barely noticed.
#ShortToedTreecreeper #CerthiaBrachydactyla #Boomkruiper
#BirdPhotography #ForestBirds #WildlifePhotography
#Canon5DMarkIV #Sigma100400 #HandheldPhotography
#LowLightPhotography #NatureObservation #AvianEcology
#BirdBehavior #WoodlandWildlife #DutchNature
#OisterwijkseBossen #SmallBirds #QuietMoments
#ScientificCuriosity #NatureDetails #FieldBiology
#PixelfedPhotography #NatureLovers #BirdWatchers
#ByMaikeldeBakker #WonderingLens





