Turner took up photography after meeting pioneering wildlife photographer
Richard Kearton in 1900, For a quarter of a century, Turner lived and worked for part of each year, at
Hickling Broad in Norfolk. She stayed mainly on a
houseboat of her own design, which she named after the
water rail (
Rallus aquaticus), the first bird that she photographed in the Norfolk Broads. The flat-bottomed boat was transported to Hickling on a trolley, and launched in March 1905. She also owned a hut on a small island in the south-east of Hickling Broad, which became known as "Turner's Island". The hut was used as a photographic
darkroom and a spare bedroom when visitors stayed. , the first record of the species breeding in the UK since 1886 |alt=monochrome photograph of a resting bittern, partially hidden by reeds or grass, with its neck elongated, its beak pointed almost vertically upwards and its feathers fluffed up A highlight of her career, in 1911, was finding with Jim Vincent, and photographing, a nestling
bittern (
Botaurus stellaris), a species that had not been recorded as breeding in the UK since 1886. Her nest photographs included those of the rare
Montagu's harrier (
Circus pygargus) and the first known breeding
ruffs (
Calidris pugnax) in Norfolk since 1890. Unusually for the time, the Whiteslea Estate, which owned much of the broad, and for which Vincent worked from 1909 to 1944, actively protected its birds of prey. Although both Montagu's and the then even rarer
marsh harrier (
Circus aeruginosus) bred there at the time, neither was mentioned in her book
Broadland Birds. She seems to have been generally fit, and was described as being "quite capable with a punt or rowing boat", but she suffered bouts of illness throughout her life, with a notable attack in the summer of 1907. The cause of her illness is unknown, although
tuberculosis has been suggested. She kept dogs, particularly
Manchester Terriers, which she trained to flush birds so that she could count them. ==Travels to 1923==