The garden falls silent.

A few weeks ago, a Sparrowhawk turned our garden upside down in a storm of panic and wings. Yesterday, he returned. This time, there was no chaos — only anticipation. Every bird seemed to know what was coming. Long before I noticed him, the garden emptied itself. Not in panic, but with experience.

Only two House Sparrows (Passer domesticus — Huismus — House Sparrow) made a mistake. They chose low cover beneath the bird feeder house. When the Sparrowhawk (Accipiter nisus — Sperwer — Eurasian Sparrowhawk) landed on top of it, right above them, they froze. Perfectly still. Camouflage doing what evolution designed it to do.

The garden was silent. Too silent.

The sparrowhawk scanned the area, clearly disappointed. Then the two sparrows shifted… and briefly quarrelled. A fatal error. In a flash of muscle and feathers, the hawk launched himself downward. The sparrows reacted instantly — nimble, desperate, alive. They fled with the hawk right on their tail, vanishing beyond the garden.

I don’t know how it ended. That’s nature.

Predators like the Sparrowhawk don’t hunt for sport. They take what they need, removing weakness and maintaining balance. Without them, ecosystems collapse quietly and invisibly. Watching this unfold from my lunch table was a reminder that even the smallest garden is part of a much larger system.

Photographed handheld with my Canon 5D Mark IV and Sigma 100–400mm at f/6.3, 1/250 sec, ISO 3200 — overcast, calm, and deceptively peaceful.

Nature rarely announces itself loudly. Sometimes, it simply holds its breath.

#AccipiterNisus #Sperwer #EurasianSparrowhawk
#PasserDomesticus #Huismus #HouseSparrow
#BirdPhotography #GardenWildlife #UrbanNature
#NatureObservation #EcologicalBalance #Predation
#WildlifeBehavior #BirdsInTheGarden #NatureStory
#HandheldPhotography #Canon5DMarkIV #Sigma100400
#WinterWildlife #OvercastDays #NaturalSelection
#FoodChain #Ecosystem #BackyardNature
#PixelfedPhotography #WildlifeMoments
A Field Day for the Bees – Cornflower & Thistle in Bloom

A few days ago, while hiking with my wife, we stumbled upon a sea of cornflowers (Centaurea cyanus) and thistles in full bloom — a buzzing paradise for bees. I grabbed my Canon 7D Mark II with the Sigma 100–400mm lens and captured three moments from this joyful dance of wings and petals.

Cornflowers and thistles are more than just wild beauty. They are nectar-rich species that play a crucial role in supporting pollinators like honeybees, bumblebees, and solitary bees. In an age where pollinator populations are under pressure due to habitat loss and pesticide use, seeing this thriving patch felt like a hopeful sign — a reminder of how small pieces of land can become sanctuaries.

The buzzing was almost musical, a chorus of life continuing its quiet work. It’s easy to overlook how vital these tiny creatures are. Without pollinators, most flowering plants — including many of our food crops — would struggle to reproduce.

Small flowers. Small insects. Huge impact.

#cornflower #thistle #wildflowers #pollinators #beesofinstagram #biodiversity #nederlandsenatuur #canon7dmarkii #sigma100400 #wildlifelovers #insectphotography #pollination #ecologicalbalance #natuurfotografie #summerblooms #naturemoments #meadowmagic #fieldofbees #savethebees #rewilding #beeconservation #flowersandbees #dutchlandscape #naturewalk #naturalharmony
FHRAI Hosts ‘Harit Yoga’ at FHRAI-IHM to Mark International Day of Yoga – Tycoon World

Emphasising Peace, Wellness, and Nature New Delhi, 30 April, 2025: The Federation of Hotel & Restaurant Associations of India (FHRAI), in collaboration

Tycoon World
Africa: Hooves Vs. Habitats - Striking a Sustainable Balance Between Livestock and the Environment Is Crucial to Africa's Future: [IPS] Dakar, Senegal -- In my country, Senegal, almost 70 percent of our land is used to graze livestock. Here and across Africa, pastoralists and livestock keepers sustain herding systems which are closely bound up with our landscapes and crucial to… http://newsfeed.facilit8.network/TKGyLP #SustainableAgriculture #LivestockManagement #FoodSecurity #EcologicalBalance #Pastoralism
Longueuil, Que., declares 'end of the deer saga' after more than 100 killed
A total of 105 deer have been killed in an operation the city says was needed to restore the ecological balance in a local park.
#deer #operation #ecologicalbalance #Longueuil #Que #News #Canada #Montreal
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/deer-longueil-cull-1.7409541?cmp=rss
Longueuil, Que., declares 'end of the deer saga' after more than 100 killed | CBC News

A total of 105 deer have been killed in an operation the city says was needed to restore the ecological balance in a local park.

CBC

Study links the mass deaths of (insect-eating) bat colonies in the US due to a fungus, with massive increases in pesticide use which, in turn, resulted in 1300 extra child deaths.

It's all connected.

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/sep/05/loss-of-bats-to-lethal-fungus-linked-to-1300-child-deaths-in-us-study-says-aoe

#EcologicalBalance #BatsAreGood

Loss of bats to lethal fungus linked to 1,300 child deaths in US, study says

Because bats feed on crop pests, their disappearance led to a surge in pesticide use. Research found a rise in infant mortality in areas where the bats had been wiped out

The Guardian
The Paradox of Progress - Solar Farms and the Cost of Green Energy

This is bugging me. Yesterday, driving through the countryside near where I grew up, I couldn't help but notice the changing landscape. Where there once st...

unasserted

"These Indigenous beliefs are not merely folklore; they hold profound ecological wisdom that scientists are finally beginning to recognize. In fact, many say that science is only beginning to catch up to Indigenous knowledge."

#IndigenousKnowledge #decolonize #EcologicalBalance

https://www.safinacenter.org/blog/unveiling-the-mystical-connections-sharks-and-indigenous-mythology?s=09

Unveiling the Mystical Connections: Sharks and Indigenous Mythology — The Safina Center

By Safina Center Senior Fellow Dani Khan Da Silva

The Safina Center