FROM harvest mice to hoverflies and waxwings to spider webs, 12 photographers from across Worcestershire are celebrating after being chosen as winners in a popular county wildlife calendar.

Each year, Worcestershire Wildlife Trust runs a photography competition to celebrate the natural wonders of the county’s gardens, greenspaces, towns and countryside.

Photographers are invited to enter images to win the chance of being featured in the charity’s fundraising calendar.

Wendy Carter, organiser of the competition, said: “From gardens to nature reserves and in both our urban and rural spaces, we have some wonderful wildlife and wild places.

“We’ve also got some very talented photographers who make life difficult for our judges.

“This year we had almost 300 images entered by 50 photographers and competition was fierce. However, we’re so pleased to see that we’ve got a wonderful calendar full of fantastic images that will look great in people’s homes and the sales of which will help our conservation work right across the county.”

All winning images feature as A4 pages in the Trust’s 2021 calendar, which also features 24 further runners-up photos as smaller inserts.

The overall winner, whose photograph features on the front cover of the calendar, is Richard Clifford of Bromsgrove.

Richard’s pearl-bordered fritillary, taken in the Wyre Forest, beat off strong competition from three other images in a public vote run across the Trust’s social media channels.

Richard said: “I am absolutely amazed and thrilled to be announced as the overall winner of this great competition.

“The news of being a finalist was praise enough but being voted the overall winner has blown me away. Thank you to anyone and everyone that voted for my picture.

“I class myself as an ‘over enthusiastic amateur photographer’ and, as other similar photographers will understand, my biggest critic is myself; that’s why a big part of this success is down to those other photographers."

Pete Walkden of Pete Walkden Photography and Jason Curtis of Wyre Wildlife, help to choose the 12 winners.

Wendy added: “A big thank you is due to all the photographers who took time to sort through their photos and enter this year’s competition as well to Pete and Jason for helping to judge this year’s shortlist.

“It’s great to see so many varied images of our wildlife and wild places, demonstrating just how much there is to see in Worcestershire if you take the time to look. This year’s winning images were taken in gardens, on our nature reserves and whilst people were on walks in their local areas – nature is there for us all to discover and enjoy.

“We always have good numbers of photos of wildlife taken in people’s gardens and we expect that, due to this year’s lockdown restrictions, this will boom next year so we’d like to take the chance to encourage everyone to look closer at the wild space on their doorstep to see what they can find. Just don’t forget to have a camera close to hand!”

Entries for the 2022 calendar will open later this year.

The calendar is available to buy from the Trust’s online shop and costs £7.00 www.worcswildlifetrust.co.uk/shop. All proceeds directly benefit the Trust’s work to protect Worcestershire’s wildlife and wild places.