Show your Bird Portraits

AlanF said:
Canon7D with f/2.8 300mm II + 2xTC, iso 400, 1/320 - 1/500 f/5.6

These are at the limits of resolution as the kingfisher was quite far away. I was hand holding the light combo with the 300mm + 2xTC. The kingfisher hovered with head dead still, dived and came up with his catch.
That first image is really cool Alan! 8) For just a split second, I thought you had a hummer there! Nice job! Hard to catch these fast as rocket little guys!
 
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@Kernuak. Yes it is a pigeon. The wood it is perched on top of is a very old, weathered telephone pole. From there I saw him fly off to a larger pine tree if that helps.


Kernuak said:
atosk930 said:
Not sure if I've ever shared this one with the group here. I also realize that it's not a hawk after educating myself. I shot this in northern New Jersey. Can anyone ID it?

edit: had trouble with the insert tool the first few times
Is that a pigeon it's feasting on? That would help to size it. It's definitely a falcon, but I'm not sure it is quite big enough for a peregrine, plus I'm not familiar with North American distribution. The hood doesn't look as distinct as normal, but it could be a juvenile bird or it could be the angle.
 
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steven kessel said:
Pyrrhuloxia. EOS 7D, 100-400 4-5.6 L IS, hand held, ISO 320 cropped in PhotoShop, white balance adjusted slightly to account for low late afternoon sunlight.

How did you do the sharpening? I can see an outline all the way around the bird that is much noisier than the rest of the picture, I presume that's from whatever sharpening technique you used.
 
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I don't think I sharpened this one. It's possible that I did a bit of noise reduction on the background and perhaps the much noisier outline you see is the area inside my outline of the bird. But, honestly, I don't see it, your eyes are better than mine.
 
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scrappydog said:
Krob78 said:
The Crane is beautiful Ren... Wish we had some of those down here in Florida!
There are quite a few at the Animal Kingdom park at Disney World and the Animal Kingdom Lodge savannas. They are beautiful.
Indeed! I prefer not to pay the almost $100 to go see them... I would prefer to find them in the wild, although, we certainly have our share of excellent Avian.. ;D
 
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steven kessel said:
I don't think I sharpened this one. It's possible that I did a bit of noise reduction on the background and perhaps the much noisier outline you see is the area inside my outline of the bird. But, honestly, I don't see it, your eyes are better than mine.
I see it. I was thinking maybe setting the radius at around 1.4 or a little less may fix it. Then again, shooting with the 100-400mm, maybe not quite as tight a crop would reduce the affect. Nice work though, wouldn't have thought it was a low light image! Good job on the handheld too... :D
 
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atosk930 said:
@Kernuak. Yes it is a pigeon. The wood it is perched on top of is a very old, weathered telephone pole. From there I saw him fly off to a larger pine tree if that helps.


Kernuak said:
atosk930 said:
Not sure if I've ever shared this one with the group here. I also realize that it's not a hawk after educating myself. I shot this in northern New Jersey. Can anyone ID it?

edit: had trouble with the insert tool the first few times
Is that a pigeon it's feasting on? That would help to size it. It's definitely a falcon, but I'm not sure it is quite big enough for a peregrine, plus I'm not familiar with North American distribution. The hood doesn't look as distinct as normal, but it could be a juvenile bird or it could be the angle.
Doing a bit of digging, I think it can only be either a peregrine falcon or a prairie falcon, but I'm no expert, especially on North American birds. Looking at the distribution though, neither really quite fits, although I would say the peregrine is the closest match in terms of geography.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peregrine_Falcon
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prairie_Falcon
 
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Krob - thanks for the words on the American Kestrel..maybe I should check out that movie...

Atosk..that is a Peregine Falcon alright however it is important to note this is an immature or juvenile. Note the pale crown around the eye (not solid as with the adults). Also this is the Tunrda sub species and not Peale's (or Pacific) sub species. Also the dark streak beneath the eye, this is known as a "dark mustache" (reference Sibley's Guide To Birds pg 133)
 
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