cross-posted from: https://lemmygrad.ml/post/12140367
A window on the wild: The best of British wildlife photography | Country Life

It's boxing day for the brown hares of Bintree in Norfolk, captured in Sarah Darnell's 'The Fur Flew'
(Image credit: Sarah Darnell/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

Hello petal: A shower of pollen is scattered by a foraging bee illuminated in the glow of the sun in Alison Bell's highly commended 'A Kind of Magic'.
(Image credit: Alison Bell/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

A camouflaged flower crab spider blends in with the colour of the blooms in the hope of ambushing any unsuspecting bees, moths and other insects in Adam Ferry's 'Waiting on a Daisy'.
(Image credit: Adam Ferry/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

Turning heads: Cate Barrow attracts the icy stare of a short-eared owl in her 'Upside Down Owl'
(Image credit: Cate Barrow/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

More than 250 of the winning and shortlisted images are published in 'British Wildlife Photography Awards Collection 14' (£35, Graffeg Books). Entries are now open for the 2027 competition.
(Image credit: British Wildlife Photography Awards)

Trouble afoot: A plucky juvenile starling struggles to escape the clutches of a sparrowhawk in Mark Parker's 'Nemesis', winner of the Animal Behaviour category.
(Image credit: Mark Parker/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

'So glad you could come': A dew-doused azure damselfly appears to beckon the viewer through a nibbled leaf that forms Lee Frost's 'Nature's Window'.
(Image credit: Lee Frost/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

Someone to look up to: A fox cub is a study in adoration under the watchful care of its mother in Victor Soares's 'Admiration in a Fox's Eyes'.
(Image credit: Victor Soares/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

When time flies: A flurry of feathered seeds dances from the shaken head of a delicate dandelion clock as a bank vole contemplates sinking its teeth into the stem in Paul Williams's 'Zephyr'.
(Image credit: Paul Williams/British Wildlife Photography Awards)

Flyleaf: a patchwork leaf-cutter bee in Chris Jackson's 'Bringing in the Leaves', which was highly commended in the Hidden Britain category. The bees cut discs out of greenery and glue them together with saliva to build cells to house their larvae.
(Image credit: Chris Jackson/British Wildlife Photography Awards)