p.167 #1 · Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G Image Thread
These two images are from this summer; a part of only a few sequences I could get due to the decline in owl population at this location. This owl was on its final approach to the burrow after a successful hunt.
p.167 #2 · Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G Image Thread
photonoclast wrote:
I really like this one!
Myself, I would even crop a tighter vertical, going for a 2:1 ratio (it's just a personal thing; I much prefer for verticals either a 5:4 ratio or a 2:1 ratio than the 3:2 one gets without a crop). A lot of Japanese panel paintings with birds have that elongated aspect ratio too. Just a thought.
Thank you, any thoughts and advice good or bad is always much appreciated I'll certainly give the other ratios a go
p.167 #5 · Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G Image Thread
AGeoJO wrote:
These two images are from this summer; a part of only a few sequences I could get due to the decline in owl population at this location. This owl was on its final approach to the burrow after a successful hunt.
p.167 #12 · Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G Image Thread
I posted the complete sequence in the N&W board a few months ago and here are a few images when the peregrine falcon mother brought a half-consumed kill near the nest to entire her chick or chicks to grab it while mid-air. Peregrine falcons and white-tailed kites conduct this training behavior that I have observed.
p.167 #17 · Sony FE 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G Image Thread
Photo cross posted in the Sony FE Image Thread and taken at 2:08 PM.
Looking at an Immature Tricolored Heron.
Cropped, supported hand held out car window 200-600mm G set to 541mm and A7rIII; silent shutter.
ISO 200, f8.0, 1/800 second.
January 2, 2020
Along Black Point Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge, FL.