Don Haines said:
From this morning at work.....
Documenting an equipment setup so off across the field to take some pictures in the remote hut.... On the way back I was dragging out an old satellite dish through the field behind me when out of the fog Bambi appears and comes over to check me out.....
With noise I was making, this was most definitely NOT a case of great fieldcraft and sneaking up on the critter.... I was not quiet with the dish dragging behind me..... perhaps it's like a giant cat toy that works on deer......
Both shots with a 7D2 and 17-55 lens, ISO 1280, 1/40th second, and uncropped
Its amazing how close you can get, when in Shenandoah and smokeys earlier in the year you could walk straight up to them. The red deer here in Cumbria UK are so unused to any people that you have to be crawling on all fours at 500m to get anywhere near! Yet if you head to Richmond park in London you can walk straight up to them no problem to me it sort of ruins the fun…
I read an amusing article on FB yesterday on outdoor photographys page where a photographer explained how he had taken the image (which was wonderful) but it was in Richmond park, its literally just outside central London with hundreds of thousands of people walking through each year the deer are so tame that he could get within 20m!
www.outdoorphotographer.com/blog/behind-the-shot/2015/11/behind-the-shot-autumn-call-by-mark-bridger-richmond-park-london-england.html?utm_source=facebook&ute_medium=status&utm_campaign=bts
So being used to living a bit out in the wilds and getting even remotely close you have to be extremely lucky it gave me a bit of a laugh that they made such a big article about it, the comparisons are almost off the scale!
It does make me feel a bit annoyed as with real wild animals that live out of the reach of humans, getting a good shot takes a great amount of time and skill. But you can just wander to a place like Richmond park and get featured in the magazine! lol