
Nice one J. I haven't caught one of these yet either. I was just thinking today that I need to put it on my list. They really are beautiful!jrista said:Just went out and did some bird photography for the first time in a good while. My EF 100-400mm lens was dropped, and I had to get it repaired. Finally got it back (although there is a story about that, resulting in the lens getting dropped AGAIN, which affected IQ, but not enough to be a huge problem.) Anyway, first time I've ever photographed an American Avocet. BEAUTIFUL BIRDS! They are rather large for a shore bird, with a slightly up-curved bill, with a beautiful rusty-colored head and white-ringed eyes. A fairly large group, at leas 12 strong at my highest count, was distributed along the sandy shore and mud flats of Cherry Creek Reservoir, in a wetland reserve area along the south east shore. This was one of the last few shots of the day, when the sun finally came out and was in the perfect position behind my, nicely illuminating the bird:
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See more at my site (including the story about my lens).
Love the pairs Scarey! :-Xscarey83 said:I've only recently started but here's a few of mine. All hand-held, 7D, usually ISO 800 or 1600, no idea of the other settings.
Geese Flying (100-400 L)
IM130780.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Swans Flying (100-400 L):
IM131697.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Wren (70-300 L):
IM132508.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Swans Fightling (100-400 L)
IM131916.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Starlings (70-300 L)
IM132740.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Blackbird (70-300 L)
IM133941.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
scarey83 said:I've only recently started but here's a few of mine. All hand-held, 7D, usually ISO 800 or 1600, no idea of the other settings.
Geese Flying (100-400 L)
IM130780.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Swans Flying (100-400 L):
IM131697.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
bjd said:Blue Tit, Bearded Tit, ZZ-Tit or just a very orthodox one?
dolina said:
Mick said:A few more from a recent trip.
jrista said:scarey83 said:I've only recently started but here's a few of mine. All hand-held, 7D, usually ISO 800 or 1600, no idea of the other settings.
Geese Flying (100-400 L)
IM130780.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Swans Flying (100-400 L):
IM131697.jpg by sm_carey, on Flickr
Those first two images are great! That synchronous flight is amazing!
Ooops, it was meant as a joke, due to the mouthfull of dog hair that it has in its beak........ :-\jrista said:bjd said:Blue Tit, Bearded Tit, ZZ-Tit or just a very orthodox one?
It just looks like its molting. Every bird has two primary molts a year...one for breeding plumage, and one for winter plumage. When they are in the middle of a molt, or just about to molt, they can look a bit raddy and their colors/patterns aren't quite standard. This looks like a Blue Tit to me. Definitely not a Bearded.
Its really hard to tell, maybe a crab or crawfish? Maybe a closeup at full resolution would tell?jrista said:Mick said:A few more from a recent trip.
Is that a giant tadpole the GBH has? It doesn't look like a fish...
That's an idea! It is summer now and both dogs will start shedding soon!bjd said:Ooops, it was meant as a joke, due to the mouthfull of dog hair that it has in its beak........ :-\jrista said:bjd said:Blue Tit, Bearded Tit, ZZ-Tit or just a very orthodox one?
It just looks like its molting. Every bird has two primary molts a year...one for breeding plumage, and one for winter plumage. When they are in the middle of a molt, or just about to molt, they can look a bit raddy and their colors/patterns aren't quite standard. This looks like a Blue Tit to me. Definitely not a Bearded.
When we brush our dog, in the springtime the hairs go into the feeder shown so birds can take them as nesting material.
Cheers Brian
