Tag: antelope island
Even An Ugly, Junky Setting Can Result In A Beautiful Image
Broad-tailed Hummingbird – A Lifer For Me
Loggerhead Shrike In Full Flight
White-lined Sphinx Moth (Hummingbird Moth)
Hummingbird Potpourri
Some Interesting Poses From A Rufous Hummingbird
Hummingbirds And The Way I Prefer To Photograph Them
Sphinx (Hummingbird) Moth In Flight – (5 images)
Iridescence And The Role of Plumage Variations In Juvenile Magpies
Rabbits, Ticks And Family History
Juvenile Magpie With Feathers Blowing Away In The Breeze
Earlier this month as I was watching this juvenile (relatively short tail) Black-billed Magpie through my lens on Antelope Island I didn’t expect anything interesting to happen except for a possible take-off shot.
Bird Banding – A Necessary Evil?
For the first six years of my bird photography “career” I rarely encountered banded birds but in the last two years or so I encounter them regularly, some species more than others. Usually when I see a bird with bands or transmitters strapped to their backs I don’t even click the shutter except for documentation purposes.
Pronghorn Buck Putting On A Burst Of Speed
Horned Larks On Perches Other Than Rocks
Even An Ugly, Junky Setting Can Result In A Beautiful Image
Broad-tailed Hummingbird – A Lifer For Me
Loggerhead Shrike In Full Flight
White-lined Sphinx Moth (Hummingbird Moth)
Hummingbird Potpourri
Some Interesting Poses From A Rufous Hummingbird
Hummingbirds And The Way I Prefer To Photograph Them
Sphinx (Hummingbird) Moth In Flight – (5 images)
Iridescence And The Role of Plumage Variations In Juvenile Magpies
Rabbits, Ticks And Family History
Juvenile Magpie With Feathers Blowing Away In The Breeze
Earlier this month as I was watching this juvenile (relatively short tail) Black-billed Magpie through my lens on Antelope Island I didn’t expect anything interesting to happen except for a possible take-off shot.
Bird Banding – A Necessary Evil?
For the first six years of my bird photography “career” I rarely encountered banded birds but in the last two years or so I encounter them regularly, some species more than others. Usually when I see a bird with bands or transmitters strapped to their backs I don’t even click the shutter except for documentation purposes.