This was a device built for a time when peoples' days began at dawn and ended shortly after the sun went down.
"At the time I took it, that had been photographed maybe less than 10 times in the world," he said."It was sheer gold on my memory card."
He had also travelled to other parts of the UK in order to capture other "extraordinary moments," including a fox family playing in Clapham, south London, and a pair of red squirrels on the Isle of Wight.Mr Fusek Peters started concentrating on his own garden wildlife after a diagnosis of bowel cancer in 2018,to "make time stop" to get shots of birds and butterflies taking off and in mid flight.
Using his kitchen as a hide, he has also taken- showing the effect of diffraction on their wings, giving a rainbow effect.
"This winter I got a woodpecker and a nuthatch" he said, adding the images were "extraordinary".
"Everyone's going to accuse me of using AI, but it's not - it's actually scientific."Earlier this week, M&S chief executive Stuart Machin said: "Over the last few weeks, we have been managing a highly sophisticated and targeted cyber-attack, which has led to a limited period of disruption."
In a media call on Wednesday, he did not respond to a question about whether the company had paid a ransom as part of the process.to follow the world's top tech stories and trends.
A hospital is celebrating the medical advancements made by its radiology department as it marks 50 years since it first opened.More than 90% of patients who attend the Royal United Hospital (RUH) in Bath, Somerset, will visit the radiology department for X-rays, CT scans or MRIs.