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Jack, your hawk is a Cooper's Hawk. With the slate-colored back, bold reddish streaking underneath and white belly. A N. Goshawk would show a finely streaked grayish underside with slate top and be almost as large as a Red-tailed. Nice shotThanks, I'll now focus on researching that one and I'll keep my eye open for more/better shots.
Jack
Really nice picture, Dockland. Especially the combination with the mossy branch.Cutie (corncrake I think)
Really nice picture, Dockland. Especially the combination with the mossy branch.
But the bird is clearly a white wagtail
This is the end of the better redbud photos I took with the R5 & RF 800 lens.
I was very happy with the image quality from this long yet light & affordable lens (relatively speaking since it is a RF lens).
(After the next 2 photos I decided to try the same experiment by adding the RF 1.4TC to the RF 800mm f11 lens and I'll continue with some of those photos below)
White throated sparrow:
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As I'm not an expert birder (not even close), I don't know what this bird is. I don't remember seeing it before.
If anyone knows, I'll gladly bow to them and enjoy knowing what you think it is.
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Now I'll start with more redbud photos with the R5 and RF 800mm f11 with RF 1.4TC added.
I was curious what IQ you could get with it. I'm still on my back porch at a distance close to the 6m MFD of the 800mm lens.
Often times, this distance was a bit too close for some of the larger birds (EG doves), but that's also part of the test.
In post, one thing I'd like to mention is that I've found DXO PL4 gets really slow when you open up a file of a thousand or so images to grade and work on. So slow that I was forced to look for alternatives to grade them down to a reasonable number of just the best ones to use PL4 on. I chose FastRaw Viewer for this purpose, and am extremely happy with how well & fast it can view the raw files and also grade them to parse them down to just the best. It costs almost nothing and is amazingly configurable to taste, so if you ever want faster raw viewing/grading I highly recommend it.
These are still with PL4 with cropping to taste, +1 lens sharpness and deep prime output, with little to no other adjustments done.
House finch:View attachment 198097
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I don't know if this is a Grackle or some other bird? :
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Carolina Chickadee:
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Cheers.
It's a Starling.I don't know if this is a Grackle or some other bird?
I think it might be a Eurasian tree sparrow/tree sparrow/German sparrow
Thanks, Dockland & AlanF! (I'm a lot better and pressing the exposure button than knowing what all the birds are)It's a Starling.
Thanks, Dockland & AlanF! (I'm a lot better and pressing the exposure button than knowing what all the birds are)