Thank You!Great shots but it's kind of standard for you...
Typical shutter speed has been 1/4000 but that's not fast enough.Thanks for that info. Did you try, if something less works?
I can't do it for my own, because we had and have a lot of rain (thankfully!) the last days and this year I saw a hummingbird moth just once.
Thanks for the reply!Typical shutter speed has been 1/4000 but that's not fast enough.
I have seen them twice this year; first time in four years.
Should be "... for her sisters!" Except if this is the queen, which I don't think.Hornet with some sweets (aka a bee) for her kids.
R5 + RF100 macro @ 1/1600, f/8, Iso1600
I am always interested in Lycaenidae. I suppose this one is from that family.Just these from today. Nothing interesting...
Well done - I'm still hunting for one!I finally managed to get my first 2022 hummingbird hawk-moth (macroglossum stellatarum).
5D4, 100-400LII+ext.,@560 mm, 1/2000, f/8, ISO 1000.
View attachment 205890
Best way to get one:Well done - I'm still hunting for one!
Thanks, I am pleased. Sharpness and detail are mediocre. But the rest is fine.Excellent shot. Well done, Maximilian.
Thanks, I am pleased. Sharpness and detail are mediocre. But the rest is fine.
My wife got a face view of it with the R7 + RF 100-400mm.
Thanks for that analysis, but the eye is not in focus.The focus is right on the eye, that's perfect, but with a very shallow DOF, it's difficult to get more details.
It's Zizina otis. Common, non native.I am always interested in Lycaenidae. I suppose this one is from that family.
Here in Germany, some of them are quite rare or at least threatened.
Yours seems to be a quite young specimen, as the wing fringes look quite new.
I recognized it and was thinking about that, too. I did minimal processing with DPP.Maximilan, I was looking at your crop, do you know what can cause this thin white outline?