'Angel-like' kingfisher shot at reserve is 'one in a million'
- Published
A picture of a kingfisher hovering above the water moments before diving for a fish has been described as a "once in a lifetime" shot by wildlife experts.
The bird was captured by keen amateur photographer Paul Gregory, from Clifton, at Attenborough Nature Reserve in Nottinghamshire on Saturday morning.
Mr Gregory, 57, said the image, which has been shared widely on social media, was a case of being in the "right place at the right time".
Tim Sexton, a manager at the Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust-run reserve, said to capture the bird in an angel-like pose was extremely rare.
The trust said birdwatchers usually only see a "flash of blue" as the bird flies past.
Mr Gregory, who had been sitting in a hide for about two hours before seeing the bird, said: "I didn't expect [to see any kingfishers] as the water was a bit weedy.
"Then I had the first sighting at about 9 and then I got that display.
"It was so rewarding as in the last year I've had nothing. Patience is a virtue."
Mr Sexton said most pictures of kingfishers, which hunt for minnows and sticklebacks in shallow pools of water, show them perching.
"Action shots like this don't happen that often," he said. "It's a real top quality [picture] and a one in a million shot."
In 2016, Attenborough Nature Reserve was voted as one of the best places to see the birds by BBC Wildlife magazine, external.
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