Tag: wilsons phalarope
Tiny Wilson’s Phalarope Chicks
Wilson’s Phalaropes Along The Antelope Island Causeway
The Highs And Lows Of My Morning On Antelope Island
Spiders, Deer And Phalaropes On Antelope Island
Wilson’s Phalarope Chick (and a frustrating equipment malfunction)
Avocets And Phalaropes In A Nasty Hailstorm
Wilson’s Phalarope Plumages And Feeding Techniques
Some Recent Shots I Like, Despite Some Flaws
Like every other bird photographer many of the photos I take are not worth keeping. For the first few years I was shooting birds I estimated that I deleted 90% of my images. Now that I’ve become a little more discriminating that number is probably closer to 95%. Birds are incredibly difficult subjects – they’re fast, unpredictable, difficult to approach and generally uncooperative. When I’m culling images after a day in the field most shots fall under two main categories – keepers and garbage. But there’s often a few that are technically lacking for one reason or another but have some unusual or especially interesting feature that makes it difficult for me to trash them. So I don’t. Occasionally I go back through them just for the fun of it. I enjoy them and thought some of you might too so here’s a few from the past month or so. 1/2500, f/7.1, ISO 500 500 f/4, 1.4 tc This one’s from yesterday – a Lark Sparrow that posed and groomed for us for quite a while. Looking through the viewfinder I had no idea there was a second Lark Sparrow in the vicinity and didn’t even notice it flying through the frame until I got home and looked at it on my computer. Mia said that she’d noticed the second bird and that it chased the first bird away when it flew. Anyway, I thought the out-of-focus sparrow to the left was an interesting serendipity. I just wish the two twigs by the head weren’t there. 1/2500, f/7.1, ISO 500 500 f/4, 1.4…
Avocets and Phalaropes in a Hailstorm
Recently I’ve been tardy in posting on this blog because Mia and I just recently returned from one of our favorite camping/photo destinations – four days at Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge. This trip was a memorable one (as they always are at RRL). Canon 40D, 1/200, f/16, ISO 500 @35mm, ev 0.0 5:30 pm. We were photographing American Avocets and Wilson’s Phalaropes on one of the refuge ponds when we looked behind us to the west and saw this impressive storm heading our way. It was really dumping on the foothills surrounding the valley and we figured things might get interesting so we decided to stay at the pond and see what happened. Good thing we were shooting from my pickup or we’d have been in trouble… Canon 40D, 1/250, f/16, ISO 500 @17mm, ev +0.33 5:52 pm. The slow-moving storm took a while to get to us but when it did it was impressive. It began to rain very hard. It was so intense that neither of us could keep water off of our lenses – in spite of the 7″ long hood on the end of my 500mm lens. I love my new Ford F-150 pickup but the engineers did a poor job on the roof rain channels and water simply poured in off the roof whenever a window was down. As you can see in my side mirror, Mia (who shoots from the back seat) has taken a temporary respite from the downpour and has her lens pulled in and her window…
Tiny Wilson’s Phalarope Chicks
Wilson’s Phalaropes Along The Antelope Island Causeway
The Highs And Lows Of My Morning On Antelope Island
Spiders, Deer And Phalaropes On Antelope Island
Wilson’s Phalarope Chick (and a frustrating equipment malfunction)
Avocets And Phalaropes In A Nasty Hailstorm
Wilson’s Phalarope Plumages And Feeding Techniques
Some Recent Shots I Like, Despite Some Flaws
Like every other bird photographer many of the photos I take are not worth keeping. For the first few years I was shooting birds I estimated that I deleted 90% of my images. Now that I’ve become a little more discriminating that number is probably closer to 95%. Birds are incredibly difficult subjects – they’re fast, unpredictable, difficult to approach and generally uncooperative. When I’m culling images after a day in the field most shots fall under two main categories – keepers and garbage. But there’s often a few that are technically lacking for one reason or another but have some unusual or especially interesting feature that makes it difficult for me to trash them. So I don’t. Occasionally I go back through them just for the fun of it. I enjoy them and thought some of you might too so here’s a few from the past month or so. 1/2500, f/7.1, ISO 500 500 f/4, 1.4 tc This one’s from yesterday – a Lark Sparrow that posed and groomed for us for quite a while. Looking through the viewfinder I had no idea there was a second Lark Sparrow in the vicinity and didn’t even notice it flying through the frame until I got home and looked at it on my computer. Mia said that she’d noticed the second bird and that it chased the first bird away when it flew. Anyway, I thought the out-of-focus sparrow to the left was an interesting serendipity. I just wish the two twigs by the head weren’t there. 1/2500, f/7.1, ISO 500 500 f/4, 1.4…
Avocets and Phalaropes in a Hailstorm
Recently I’ve been tardy in posting on this blog because Mia and I just recently returned from one of our favorite camping/photo destinations – four days at Red Rock Lakes National Wildlife Refuge. This trip was a memorable one (as they always are at RRL). Canon 40D, 1/200, f/16, ISO 500 @35mm, ev 0.0 5:30 pm. We were photographing American Avocets and Wilson’s Phalaropes on one of the refuge ponds when we looked behind us to the west and saw this impressive storm heading our way. It was really dumping on the foothills surrounding the valley and we figured things might get interesting so we decided to stay at the pond and see what happened. Good thing we were shooting from my pickup or we’d have been in trouble… Canon 40D, 1/250, f/16, ISO 500 @17mm, ev +0.33 5:52 pm. The slow-moving storm took a while to get to us but when it did it was impressive. It began to rain very hard. It was so intense that neither of us could keep water off of our lenses – in spite of the 7″ long hood on the end of my 500mm lens. I love my new Ford F-150 pickup but the engineers did a poor job on the roof rain channels and water simply poured in off the roof whenever a window was down. As you can see in my side mirror, Mia (who shoots from the back seat) has taken a temporary respite from the downpour and has her lens pulled in and her window…