Amateur Photographer - UK (2020-05-16)

(Antfer) #1

subscribe 0330 333 1113 I http://www.amateurphotographer.co.uk I 16 May 2020 49


It was also around this time that
a talented Hungarian wildlife
photographer, Bence Máté, was
experimenting building hides with
one-way glass. He has gone on to
take hide design to another level,
popularising the use of one-way
glass in hides worldwide. Such
hides are becoming an
increasingly popular addition to
photographers’ gardens. Based in
Finland, Jari Peltomäki has gone a
step further by installing a 4x2m
window in a room overlooking the
garden at Villa Finnature
guesthouse allowing photography
without leaving the house.


On a summer’s day four years
ago a sparrowhawk landed by a
small pool I had constructed in a
small woodland in North Norfolk.
Sat in a small canvas hide with a
poor view, my tiny lens movement
to frame him was met with a
pitiless glare then a flurry of wings.
You guessed it, I missed the shot.
I resolved that day to build my own
hide with one-way glass.

Building the hide
My first decision was where to site
it. It needed to be open enough
for sunlight to reach the woodland
floor throughout the year. As there

was a lack of water I decided the
main feature in front of the hide
should be a pool. Most wildlife
photographers like to shoot at a
low angle to their subject – as the
more on the level you are, the
more intimate the picture feels. To
create this opportunity required
building a sunken hide, so first I
dug a hole around a metre deep
and 3x2m in area. In retrospect
I got a bit carried away with the
digging but I used the excavated
soil to bank up one side, so my
pool would be level, as the ground
was on a slight slope. Before
investing in a wooden structure

I erected a makeshift hide made
from weed control cloth hung
around a wooden frame.
Once erected the next job was
to create my pool. Although
reflection pools have become
extremely popular, I have never
been a big fan – drinking birds
often look like they are standing
on the edge of a drop, which they
are. So my intention from the start
was to create something that had
a natural feel with good
backgrounds. Shallow pools work
best as birds like to wade in to
bathe and sparrowhawks
often sit for minutes at a time
Free download pdf