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Long-billed Dowitcher

The Cottonwood Creek area is really starting to heat up. A number of duck species are still hanging around, at this point I suspect for the whole summer. The shorebirds are starting to show up in larger numbers as well. One of my favorites is the Dowitcher, the long-billed dowitcher to be specific. They are one of the more colorful shorebirds, with colorful golden-fringed back feathers and buffy breats, and beautiful streaks around their faces.

Managed to capture a few shots of a trio of dowitchers just at sunset. My vantage point allowed the fresh new greens of spring and the old dried browns of last years growth to produce colorful OOF reflections and blurs, which nicely complimented and contrasted with the bird's own colors.

Long-billed Dowitcher
Cottonwood Creek Wetland
Colorado

Canon EOS 7D
Canon EF 600mm f/4 L II
Gitzo GT3532LS + Jobu Pro 2

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jrista said:
Long-billed Dowitcher

The Cottonwood Creek area is really starting to heat up. A number of duck species are still hanging around, at this point I suspect for the whole summer. The shorebirds are starting to show up in larger numbers as well. One of my favorites is the Dowitcher, the long-billed dowitcher to be specific. They are one of the more colorful shorebirds, with colorful golden-fringed back feathers and buffy breats, and beautiful streaks around their faces.

Managed to capture a few shots of a trio of dowitchers just at sunset. My vantage point allowed the fresh new greens of spring and the old dried browns of last years growth to produce colorful OOF reflections and blurs, which nicely complimented and contrasted with the bird's own colors.

Long-billed Dowitcher
Cottonwood Creek Wetland
Colorado

Canon EOS 7D
Canon EF 600mm f/4 L II
Gitzo GT3532LS + Jobu Pro
Very nice indeed! A good commercial for the 7D!
 
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Jack Douglas said:
Eldar, funny I was just thinking of buying hip waders for shooting but wondered how safe they are for gear if you stumble??! Any good stories?

Jack
He he, the advantage of being a flyfisher is that you are used to balance on slippery rocks. Best advice is probably to have a wading stick. That way you always have an extra support on the bottom. I try to not go in too deep though. Luckily I have no fun stories to tell, meaning all my equipment have survived so far ;)

I would strongly recommend wading pants though. You can get fairly good ones fairly cheap.
 
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jrista said:
Beautiful shots, Eldar! That 1D X is a creamy background machine...man, what I would give to have that kind of SNR.
Thanks Jrista.

Yes, the 1DX is a phenomenal machine. Every time i use it and I don´t have to crop too much, I wonder what more I could possibly need. The biggest prints I do are 1x1.5m2 and, provided it is not a very high ISO shot and limited cropping, they look very good.
 
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Eldar said:
Jack Douglas said:
Eldar, funny I was just thinking of buying hip waders for shooting but wondered how safe they are for gear if you stumble??! Any good stories?

Jack
He he, the advantage of being a flyfisher is that you are used to balance on slippery rocks. Best advice is probably to have a wading stick. That way you always have an extra support on the bottom. I try to not go in too deep though. Luckily I have no fun stories to tell, meaning all my equipment have survived so far ;)

I would strongly recommend wading pants though. You can get fairly good ones fairly cheap.

I wish I could wade in the waters around me. Most of our lakes are part of wetlands, which means they don't have rocky shores or rock covered bottoms...it's all decaying plant matter, which ultimately results in this soft black muck that is several feet deep. Step in it, and at the very least your going to lose your shoe...try to actually walk through it, and you might actually lose yourself as well, and certainly your gear. :\
 
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jrista said:
I wish I could wade in the waters around me. Most of our lakes are part of wetlands, which means they don't have rocky shores or rock covered bottoms...

There are also small, personal-sized floats for flyfishing. They're a bit like an inflatable chair, but have holes in the "floor" for your wading boots. I've never used one, but it appears you can lightly walk the bottom, or keep a small paddle on-board.
 
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scottkinfw said:
Feeding Cardinal

I am actually fairly certain that is a bird with a severely diseased, deformed beak. A few of the house finches each year around here end up with corrupted, diseased beaks like that. It's kind of sad. It usually happens to the birds that become malnourished due to an injury or lost eye during a fight (house finches can get pretty brutal during mating season).
 
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