Wednesday, 29 April 2026

'Now, where's my nest?' Comedy Wildlife Award winner is announced... alongside other hilarious snaps

 By ELEANOR MANN

The Nikon Comedy Wildlife Award winner this year has been announced - and it's a perfectly timed snap of a gannet on a very breezy day. 

The photograph, titled 'Now, where's my nest?' by winner Alison Tuck, shows the bird blinded by grass atop Bempton Cliffs in Yorkshire. 

Other highlights included an elephant covering its eyes with its huge ears, two lemurs having a chinwag on a rock, and a marching gorilla. 

The hilarious entries from across the globe were shortlisted from the 2025 awards and voted on by the public earlier this year. 

The Category Winners and Overall Competition Winner were announced in December last year, but the People's Choice Vote is a stand-alone category where the judges step back and let the public decide. 

Crowned winner Alison Tuck said: 'Winning the Sterna People's Choice Award means a lot to me. 

'It was really exciting to get into the finals with my gannet and I was honoured to get a Highly Commended. 

'However, being awarded this category is something else and I am really chuffed and grateful to all the people who voted for me - not forgetting to mention how much fun I had - it is The Nikon Wildlife Comedy Awards after all!' 

The crowned people's winner: 'Now, where's my nest?' captured by Alison Tuck in Yorkshire

The crowned people's winner: 'Now, where's my nest?' captured by Alison Tuck in Yorkshire

A shy Sri Lankan elephant played peek a boo for UK photographer Henry Szwinto

A shy Sri Lankan elephant played peek a boo for UK photographer Henry Szwinto

A pair of lemurs appeared to be having a chinwag on a rock in Madagascar

A pair of lemurs appeared to be having a chinwag on a rock in Madagascar 

This Amazonian Umbrella Bird from Brazil opted for a Claudia Winkleman-style hairdo

This Amazonian Umbrella Bird from Brazil opted for a Claudia Winkleman-style hairdo

Left, right! Left, right! A marching gorilla showed off his high knees in Rwanda

Left, right! Left, right! A marching gorilla showed off his high knees in Rwanda 

Hands up! This flying red squirrel in Belgium was in surrender mode

Hands up! This flying red squirrel in Belgium was in surrender mode 

Three foxes play about as one falls flat on its face in the sand in the Netherlands

Three foxes play about as one falls flat on its face in the sand in the Netherlands 


Alison, from the UK, exhibited her first mounted work at the age of 15 in London. She explained the process behind her winning image: 'My gannet image was taken on a very breezy day in Yorkshire on the Bempton Cliffs. 

'There was an onshore wind which meant we couldn't shoot from the boat, however the wind played to our favour as the gannets were being pushed towards and up the cliffs giving us ample opportunity to get some lovely close-up images of them collecting grass for their nests. 

'Thank goodness! I love taking lots of photos especially of wildlife, from a tiny ant to a large elephant on land, a small crab to an orca whale in the sea or a tiny sun bird to a soaring raptor in the air, they all have their own history to tell within the world and for me capturing their stories is something very special.' 

Other entries in the competition included a family of laughing lions, a flying red squirrel, a playfighting trio of foxes, and a bird with a Claudia Winkleman-style hairdo.  

The Comedy Wildlife Awards began its life modestly in 2015 as a photographic competition. 

Since then, under its founders, Paul Joynson-Hicks MBE and Tom Sullam, it grew grown into a global competition with sustainability at its heart - in 2026, the competition is donating 10 per cent of its profits to the Born Free Foundation, an international wildlife charity rescuing and protecting wild animals from exploitation, and conserving threatened species and their natural habitats for generations to come. 

The free competition, open to wildlife photography novices, amateurs and professionals using any camera brand, 'celebrates the hilarity of our natural world and highlights what we need to do to protect it'. 



https://www.dailymail.com/news/article-15773965/Now-wheres-nest-Comedy-Wildlife-Award-winner-announced-alongside-hilarious-snaps.html



No comments:

Post a Comment