Bird photography requires great patience and a quiet, still center. You must be willing to wait for the moment when the bird you're after finally shows up and does the thing you're trying so hard to photograph. You set yourself up and make sure you're in the right place at the right time and then you hope.
I do a ton of bird photography; I spend part of every day doing it. That's because my studio window is set up to look out on one bodacious planted bird paradise of a yard. I'm bragging because I done made it myself. Everything that's there we planted, and the birds thank us by coming in close.
But waiting for Piper isn't like tapping away at your keyboard and staring to your left, then grabbing your camera as I'm doing right now. (I've taken dozens of photos of hummingbirds and yellow-throated, prairie, pine and Blackburnian warblers while trying to get this post written). It was a much more purposeful thing, because I had to wake up at 4:45, clear the blear from my eyes and be ready to rock.
Sometimes Piper would show up when there was enough light to catch him, and sometimes he wouldn't.
But other birds showed up.
4 comments:
Bonitas capturas,me gustan especialmente las del Cardenal.Saludos
Muchas gracias, Isidro. Usted tiene un nombre hermoso. Isidro Ortiz! Me gusta.
BLUE FEET?
I could almost swear that you did something to that farm bell to lure Piper. But, then I read your earlier post.
Well done.
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